24 - THE HERALD. Sat.. Aug. 1, 1981

thMPOmnimwEmusr n u t " - H O T W igg N ...page 13 t T . J'' , Tre*Remo¥et RoMlfHng MANCHESTER •Milor C M n n Otoeount QmmP Rotojir w 18111111011826.00 Mlwtimim 646- 842S BRUCl UTVINCHYK. OwiMT/OiMnrtor . Manchester, Conn. 641 LVOAU 8T„ MANCHN8T6R Serving the HAS IT! Manchester area Monday, Aug. 3, 1981 for 100 years 25 Cents / QMUREMITpMDY 763 ROUTIM TALCOTTVILLR, CT. MAIN ST. 24 NR. TOWING 6 4 3 - 1 1 9 1 191 6 4 3 - 0 0 1 6 MAIN ST. FEATURING THIS WEEK ■ ■ ■ •COMWLITI COiUtlON MWAlW MANCHESTER •POMION ANO AMiniCAN CAMS FLO’S CAKE 6 4 3 -1 8 D 0 off lob HARDWARE A A A SHUTTERS CANOPIES switchboards flooded with inquiries passengers, cost the airline industry of PATCO and impoundment of the DECOIUTING INC. WIND0W8 WASHINGTON (UP!) Air traf­ A ir T raffic CkmtroUers Organization controllers,’’ said TransporUUon 980 million a day and idle up to 65 strike fund. fic controllers walked off the job to appear In court at S. p.m.EDT Secretary Drew Lewis. and reservations, and many people /«I)SIO Despite a temporary restraining SALES—SERVICE—INSTJfiLLATION percent of all air traffic. just after dawn today in defiance of today to show cause why union ’The dtrike' forced one airline — booked flights Sunday night to be The F A A said it had 2,400 super­ order prohibiting the strike and,, a back-to-work order. President members should not be held in con­ Pittsbur^based USAlr — to cancel sure of getting to distant cities YANKEE ALUMMIM SERVICES visors and 150 military controllers, threats of imprisonment and fines, Reagan ordered the government to tempt of court for violating ita back- aU of its flights until at least noon. before the strike today. available to replace the striking con­ it appeared early today most union apeciAusTB IN CiLAaa a s c r e e n r e p a i r impound their strike fluid and to try to-work order. Other airlines'tried to continue their “ I don’t want to get stuck ... or f e s i g n s j n c trollers, but they could handle only controllers had obeyed their union to decertify their union. The Justice Department had ob­ normal flight schedules, as super­ have to ride a bus all the way 20 WARREN STREET 40 to 50 percent of all air carrier and walked o ff the job. M l tMOAO STMCf T MANCHlSTin CONN 0«0«0 ' The Federal Aviation Administra­ tained tiie temporary restraining visory personnel took over for the home,” said Frank Singleton, a MANCHESTER. CONN. flights. Most of the flights under 500 Jffi^takum, a PATCO official, tion said it asked the major com­ order before the strike began, at striking controllers. Detroit businessman who was in Manchttlcr Professional Park, Suite A-1 Belly CaMaoher. Prop. • 4 9 - 1 1 0 f t miles would be grounded. said the union was prepared to stay mercial . airlines to reduce their about 7 a.m. local time, since it is Il­ Of the 17,000 controllers New Orleans, but heading to A t'th e White House, spokesman out for at least one month, as picket flights by 90 percent. “ We hope to legal for federal, employees to nationwide, 19,000 are members of Albuquerque, N.M., on the next leg Larry Speakes said Reagan was lines were formed outside several JMf StRVICI AND INSTALL INDUSTRIAL AND COMMiRCIAL ease that later,’ ’ a spokesman said. strike. ^le Fhrofessional A ir T raffic Con­ of his trip. “ personally disappointed” at the AIR CONDITIONING - REFRIGERATION U.8. District Judge Joyce Green “ We are bringing the fall force of trollers Organization. The strike could ground more than Pleatie turn to page 8 K-B AUTOMOTIVE half the nation’s 800,000 daily air walkout and directed decertification HEATING and SHEET METAL KEN IRAITHWAITE ordered officials of the Protessioifal the Justice Department down on the Train and bus lines reported their 299 BROAD ST. 643-8844

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CLYDE A MICKEY MILLER'S Serviiis Mniirhenter orer Vtym . not TEL. 648-3828 p - p A U TO PARTS PdiDand The florist By Nancy Thompson commercial travelers who may get “AUTO PARTS FOR LESS” to Chicago today, but who knows if 24 BIRCH ST. \ Herald Reporter HOURS they’ll be able to get back 8 TO 8 MON.-FRI. TEL. 643-0247 H ie a ir traffic controllers’ strike, Wednesday.’’ € 8 TO S SAT. A SUN. \ 043-4444 affecting Bradley International Air­ C onnie I Roberts of LaBonne F.T.D. port in Windsor Locks as well as air­ Travel, 71 E. Center St., said the 307 E. CENTER ST. (REAR) MASTEH CHAR6I agency js dealing only with WORLD WIDE ports across the nation, has not MANCHESTER AMERICAN EXPRESS customers shceduled to fly today 'M SEIftlCE grounded local residents’ travel BEHIND LENOX PHARMACY plans. and tomorrow— a total of 61 people. A survey of Manchiester travel Most of those have been switched to agents this morning revealed that other airlines or flights from those I CAP -N-CORK PACKAGE STORE most people’s vacation plans are ' that have been canceled so that their 485-489 No. Main St. getting off the ground, although they plans are still operational. “ Am- Manchester, Conn. may be required to wait out delays, track is going to jbe busy,” she 649-0591 change flin ts or switch airlines. predicted. “But the question is what will Most of the travel agents adyised Hvmoilflvd &• Eninrfffd happen in 24 hours,” said Phylis anyone planning to fly to check with To Hvllvr Serve l <»ii Hendngway of Goodchild-Bartlett the airlines before making the trip Travel, 113 Main St. to Bradley. LIQUOR - BEER - CORDIALS Flo’s Cake Decorating Supplies Inc. at 191 decorating is done on the premises. For the do it 191 CENTER 8T.' SPECIAL ORDER MANCHESTER. COMN. “ I'm telUng them just to check in Larga Salaction ol CAKE Ms, Hemingway spoke for all the Center St., Manchester has been serving the. yourselfer, Flo’s carries a complete line of cake MON.-SAT. 104 and if their flight’s not takta|-iKr, Imoortad 0 Opmaslic Wliits (2031046-0220 THUR8. 10-9 ' travel agents wiira die said that the public for six years. Flo and Ed Bombardier decorating ne^s. Debbie Tedford arranges most common, reactitm , is “Just maybe they can arrange an alter­ holding one of the many novelty cakes available, items for customers. Cake decorating classes bewilderment.” nate,” Eleanor Perry of Daniels along with cakes for every occasion and are given by Flo, Ed and Debbie, Many of the agrats said they are Travel Agency, 202 E. Center St., MOHAWK INDUSTRIAL SUPPLY, INC. OVER 4 5 telling ^ple call them to said. , specializing in wedding cakes. All baking and MANCHESTER SuitpUiTH of Snfft} l*rotvftion YEARS listen to the radio for news reports. ; The complications can have a bad effect ^ on travelers, the agents MEMORIAL CO. EXPERIENCE "That’s what we’re doing,” said "N •FOUL WEATHER SUITS Rita Montalto Of-AAA Travel Agen­ noted. 0pp. Eael CanMlary CA^L 049-5807 cy, 391 Broad St. “ You plan so far in advance and •BOOTS •HOSE 646^0228 Ms. Montalto said shreceived you get ail psyched up, then you’re •QLOVES^TARPS^RESPIRATORS I several calls this morning from peo­ told your flight’s not taking off. It’s QUALITY HARRISON 8T. ple requesting tours by cars. Short really depressing,” Ms. Perry said. *5 G/«n Rd. » Manchester • 643-S107\ MEMORIALS MANCHESTER flights of less than 500 miles are Jan Champagne of Airway Travel MINIT-MAN PRINTINR most likely to be cancelled, accor­ Agency Inc., 457 Oenter St., said ding to Debbie Fortin of AAA many of the people traveling now are honeymooners. This weekend’s Spring Call tor quality steam Travel. newlyweds got off before the strike l^carpel cleaning... the All of the agencies contacted EVERYTHING IN GLASS 4 Cloaning? hit, she said, adding that she hopes • WE CAN T HIDE BEHIND OUR PRODUCT " Bane-Clene way reported that people are taking the CALL strike calmly. things are settled before next "We had to change a few reser­ weekend’s brides and grooms Delta Maintenance prepare to take off. J.A. WHITE GLASS CO. T 497 No. Mein St. vations,” said Dennis O’Brien of Globe Travel Servico, 555 Main St. Ms. Hemingway said she had ' -H 6 4 3 -B 0 B 6 booked a pair of honeymooners • 4 « - 7 s a a Wo do • loto more than “ A lot of people are changing to next oren .io if.m .s f. vPK H it v *>, doan carpels" week when the strike may be over.” making a late start to Bermuda this |31 BISSELL 8T. MANCHESTER FRU ESTIMATES The agents all said they are morning. They made it from, Hart­ Lauren and friends •MIRRORS •SHOWER DOORS •STORE FRONTS 24 HOUR SERVICE hoping for a quick resolution of the ford to Boston, she said, “ But who •SAFETY GLASS •BATHTUB ENCLOSURES •ETC knows if they got out of Boston," she FULLY INtURED strike. Lauren Cable takes a breather with her rabbits — one tame and agriculture program at Rockville High School this fall. Story on said. "W e’re just hanging in to see what one wild — on her back lawn in Manchester. The 14-year-old page 4. (Herald photo by Pinto) happens,” said Ms. Hemingway. '“ I The iKHieymooners, she added, are high school Treshrhan Is preparing to enter the vocational FAMOUS BRAND J. B. EUCTROMCS think the biggest problem is. the “ the ones who get nervous.” STEREO • MUSIC AMPS • TV TELEVISION - APPLIANCES SALES AND SERVICE M \m ;i i i :s t i ;h Senate^yotes today HOME IMPMVEMUT MV. 649-3589 Hilt to Stop ( Shop Reagan and Kennedy at odds on tax cut TV .JACK pERTRAND 643-1262

“We want the conferees to go long recess for fence-mending, cam­ vote. The Senate, which has several WASHINGTON (UPI) - Presi­ back to a House-Senate confwence sion — no one can remember a star­ back into conference,” Kennedy paigning or foreign travel. - oil-state senators on its tax-writing SaeaMheie e> nraiM dent Reagan and Sen. Edward committee to eliminate what he ting tUne like it before was MERCURY ^1^^^ said, describing the |31 billion that The tax cut, costing about 9750 committee, included 96.5 billion Kennedy, D-Mass., are at odds over calls unfair tax breaks (Or the oil in- brouf^t about by Kennedy, who would go to the oil companies as billion through' 1966, would reduce^ worth of oi)_tax breaks in its bill. OLCOTT PACKAGE STORE the b ig g ^ tax cut in history. While dustey. But bis chances of success in threatened a filibuster and then SS4 Ceinor jlwot Muotwrtor, CT “ unfair, unjust and unwarranted." individual taxes 25 percent across-' The conferees agreed to split the Reagan says it is vital for a healthy 4he RepubUcan-domlnated Senate didn’t even show np. MMfttiOMiMHwn “ Working men and women are the-board over 33 months. It con­ difference between the House and economy, Kennedy says it Is slanM seem nil. Sen. Rudy Boschwitz, R-Minn., Phone 646-2796 ^ AOUBDISCeilllTPOUCYA having a hard time making ends tains a raft of tax breaks for Senate bills at a cost of 911.7 billion 18% blweeM enjeejeeniwhaw M Uqiier er wine for oil companies. There also may be personal angry oyer Kennedy's no-show, NO SERVICE CHARGE 18H nwMMI an mhml BYnaMied am m - ta rn twiiiilad promised to ask the Massachusetts m eet,” he said. “ Then when untold businesses. , over the next five years. liie Senate is scheduled to vote recriminations left over fnm i Satur- The final argument was over the wFfawa Doni^rat about his whereabouts. billions go for oil, I say that’s tiaatm Chanp w ig eoDaelpd today on the final version of day, when in extraordinary extent of oil industry loopholes. After the 54-minute session Satur­ SneerveOene lor • HoMe • AkHiiea • SleameMpe se<;^ence House-Senate conferees Sunday, Kennedy was iiYNew Bed- wrong.” ' Pataenal eheahs OMhed up to tieOM Reagan’s prized tax hUl, but before The House was scheduled to vote Reagan included about 917 billion day evening the Senate agreed to |S27 Mobi SIroot RIaiicIwelar aneed on a billoit 8 a.m. after an lord. Mass., where he appeared at a certain passage occurs a major bat­ final congressional approval on the worth of tax breaks in his final hold two hours of debate Monday On ' f »•' au -n i^ t sessimi and reconvened at 6 Portuguese religious celebration, tle— wiUi K snii^y in a leading rolp bill Tuesday, following tbe Senate proposal to attract Democratic Kennedy’s to send the bill back to p.m. EDT. campaigned for rerolection and - is likely: by a day in a rush to start a month­ votes in last week’s critical House the conference committee. The unusual Saturday night ses­ again a ^ e out against the tax cut. 8PECIALIZINQ IN MJM i: \i A> PRI.NTINC; Kennedy wants to send the bill 481 cema sT. • wuMeetna eee-im SUPERIOR MUFFLERS I DON WILUS GARAGE. MIC. cwnnEFMmMicinMtsNa Manchester Legion in Zone 8 playoff finals Dollar soars SPECIALISTS Low Cost Printing Is Only MINITS LOW COST PRWTWS^ Today'3 iie ra ^ Herpes sufferers Page I I . WHEEL alignm ent - BRAKE SERVICE • WRECKEF^ SERVICE GENERAL REPAIRING Peo|de suffering from genital h e rp e s ^ resor- away at Your MINiT-MAN Printing LONDON (U P I) — The dollar, bolstered by high U.S. Propane Cylinders Filled iing to ineffectual, sometimes dangerous interest rates and FTesident Reagan's success with his Air Conditioning Sefvice •SEE US FOB ENQRAVED NAME PLATES Was there treatments — even though theye Is no proyen vure Chance of showers TELEPHONE lTMAIN STREET We started our business in 1970 as the first econqmical prices. We are open 9:00 a.m. to 5:(fh • V Y out! NEW 848 8 M SSNSBI t . tax cuts, soared to its highest rates since the late ISTOs 34t-4931 MANCHESTER. CONN 06040 | quick print and copy center in Manchester. 0.m., Monday throu^ FVidajy, Saturdays 9:30 — out o f pain and frustration. Variable cloudiness tonight and Tuesday with a on European money markets today while gold slumped a mutiny? Meanwhile, a Yale medical school p r e f e r says TOcause of our sp^ialized high speed equip­ a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Our facilities also Include chance of showers. Detailed forecast on Page 2.. to below 1400 an ounce. lithium, a drug used to treat psychiatric disorders, ment, we are able to print from your photo ready punching, padding, stitching, cutting, collating WuUMreamutinyon In a see-saw effect as the dollar rose, the price of gold has shown some success in controlling genital copy in just a matter of minutes. We also have a and folding. We are ldcated;at 423 Center Street, the Miss Suni Suzanne declined to its lowest rate since November 1979 in Lon­ Designs & Styles valuable new 3-J4 Bond Copier which makes across from WlUle’-s' For ony inforioatloa, OCTRINSKY INC becinie the captain herpes. The stories are on Page 7, don and ^ rie h . beautiful copies on bond paper. We can also do please phone 646-1777. • ,, reftiaed to return to pwt Index Gold opened at 9393 an ounce in London against the aftar a poor catch? flyers, letters, business cards, index cards, (Shown in the above photo, left to r iA t , is: Area towns — , 18 Lottery ...... 2 close Friday of 9406. In Zurich, gold opened at 9394.50 an PERSONfll T€€| envelopes, postcards, stag tickets, rubber BriOn Barry, Linda Thatcher, Reggie Foley and The U.8. attorney’s ( ...... 21 Obituaries — ...... 8 ounce, down from 9406.50. stamps and engraved name plates and pins of all Sir Printzalot.) office is reviewing id ...... 22-23 I>eopletalk ...... 17 In contrast, gold was 9629.50 an ounce one year ago on sizes within a reasonable time, at ver,v charges that the crew In sports ...... 19 Sports ...... 9-12 the London and Zurich bullion markets. At the aid of turned on the captain , Television — ...... 17 1979, gold’s price began to rise quickly and, after the split season U k ^ in major leagues... Trio,enters 1 ...... 6 with guns and knives. . Soviet invasion of Afghanistan Uut December, it got as lost Main St., Manchester/ Tel: 646-3339 Hall of Fame,... Page 9. Entertainment ..... 17 Weather ...... 2 Paiw 18. high as ^ an ounce in January 1900. U A Pat Coelbo, Owners Jim Coelho, Manager] THE HERALD. Mon., Aug. 3. IWl - 3 2 - THE HERALD. Mon.. Aug. 3. 1861 Poland near brink again

news Briefing crtiE protests food shortage tSSmtuM* \ born. WARSAW, Poland (UPI) - The new demonstration came as to allow us to go to the party The government asked Solidarity cipline, work and peace calls for The long list of protest actions Solidarity union demonstrators government leaders w ere mjeeting headquarters,” an organizer told for the talks Friday evening after a demonstrations — he contributes to was scheduled this week included a paraded through Warsaw in hun­ with Solidarity to halt the spread of the demonstrators by lopdspeaker. week of strikes and hunger marches the country’s verging on mass antihunger march through the un wiMMn f »tocMi • protests against food shortages and “ If we don’t remain cairn, we shall to protest a 20 percent in meat catastrophe and national tragedy,” dreds of municipal vehicles in a new streets of Wlociawek in central soaring prices which they warned not be united and we shall nOt rations for August and plans to in­ the statement said, adding the protest against food shortages that Poland today and a strike alert in could lead to a “ national tragedy.’’ achieve our goals.” crease food prices. Solidarity protests could have “ incalculable was tim ^ with the start ot crisis Piotrkow Trybunalska province Outside, police stood by with jeeps The convoy of municipal vehicles leaders hurriedly assembled their consequences” for the state and na­ talks between the union and govern­ south of Warsaw, also today. V re tiP ^ ment leaders. and vans filled with tear gas and drove slowly through the streets of top leadership and agreed. tion. Czestochowa Solidarity planned a plastic shields in case of a violent the capital, flashing lights, honking “ We'want to listen to what they The warnings and vow to use the AFL-CIO not awed Scuffles broke out between regipnwide warning strike Tuesday Rajai takes oath confrontation irith the protestors. horns and tving up traffic along the have ,to say to us first,” said army and police against black demonstrators and police as a con­ and' Solidarity’s Warsaw branch At Communist Party city’s main artery, Marszalkowska Solidarity national spokesman marketeers recalled the street CHICAGO (U PI) — The AFLirits by this Albuquerque pc V sr .... Memphla ^ behind the Panama Canal Treaty that gave his naUon Auchqnige pc M SS Z1 Miami Bech la speaking under the ground rules that the weekly said. greater control of the waterway. tremendous experience,” the pope said in a tape /AAevUle pc 77 -M iB Milwaukee pc he not be Identified. “ You might Weinberger, appearing Sunday on ABC’s “ Issues and recorded messaige from his 11th floor suite in Rome’s AOanta pc S ■ .... Mlnneapolia ta Torrijos, 52, who rtfled the strategic Central n X ia Naahvine pc^ Twa^British soldiers, refer that to their preoccupation BUUun ly Answers” , insisted no “ firm , final” decision has been American nation'for 13 years, was killed in an airplane Gemelli Hospital. Blmiuifhain pe m m .... New Orleana ta with the Soviet threat. There have New York. pc made on where or how the controversial MX missile crash Friday, and his body was flown back to the capital Boetoo pc « « .... been stormy seas as you know, but Bnmsvll TX.pc m It .... Oklahm Cty pa system will be deployed. Sunday from the remote jungle crash site to lie in state Buffalo Ui Omaha pc there is a profound and fundamental But, he said, ‘‘There’s a very firm commitment to an today. A funeral mass was set for-Tuesday. Chrlstn 8.C. pc B 73 .... Fbiladelpaia (la recognition by the president M X system and by that I mean a strengthened, im­ Charm N.C. pc 78 70 .73 Pboenli V Torrijos’ light Air Force plane carrying him and six Chkato pc M f t 336, PIttaburih' U (Reagan) of the longstanding proved, much more accurate missile. Satellites launched ighth IRA faster die other people slammed into a mountainside in stormy a e m u d ah 81 88 ....V Portland M. pq obligations, responsibilities and “ It’s necessary because the Soviets during the past weather Friday while he was on an Inspection trip. “ The Cohunbui ib 81 88 .10 Portland “ Or.^ cy “ H» 77 .... Providence pc friendship (w e have) for Israel and few years have greatly strengthened and improved their VANDENBERG AIR FORCE BASE, Calif. (UPI) - Dallai pc bad weather apparently knocked them off course and Denver ay 81 88 .... Richmond pc BELFAST, Northern Ireland day of his hunger strike, after Kevin served. Britain has refused, saying its leaders.” missiles, and this would give us a greatly increased against the hill,” a National Guard spokesman said. Two ext>lorer satellites aboard the most pmaerful Delta Oea Moina pc 77 88 31 St. Lottia cy Lynch, 25, succumbed Saturday the inmates are criminals and He said Reagan and Sadat also Detroit pc 8 70 .... Salt U k Ctyay (D PI) — Rioters fired Soviet-made deterrent capability. The spokesman said Torrijos was flying from Rocket ever sent into the skies from Vandenberg Air Duluth pc 80 68 .... San Antonio pc rocket grenades at British soldiers after 71 days. yielding would allow the inmates to would seek major progress in the Penonome, 60 miles southwest of Panama City, to visit Force Base were successfully launched today after a El Paao pc 18 76 .... San Dleao f The death, of Doherty, the eighth run the prison as POWs. 1979 Camp David peace accords > Hartford pc 87 86 .... San Francac pc in street battles raging Into the eai^ a lumber mill in Coclesito, 19 miles to the north. tlureeKlay delay. Hooolulo ay 87 77 .... San Juan ay ' ly hours today in a bloody reprisal faster to die, meant that the four As news of Doherty’s death spread between Israel and Egypt. The general’s widow Raquel Paumer de T o r r ijo s , Wait D uto, public affairs representative for the Indlanapolla pc m 73 .... Seattle cy Negotiations on Palestinian (or the w e e k ^ deaths of two IRA fasters who replaced the first four in his native Belfast, rioters set up Panamanian President Aristides Royo and a grieving Kennedy Test Center, said the launch went as planned at Jackaa Maa. pc B 71 .... Spokane pc Jackaoovllle U B 70 .71 'Tampa ta hunger strtkers — the seventh and to die in May have now all suc­ burning barricades and rained more autonomy in the areas occupied crowd of government officials, friends, relatives and 2;56 a.m. PDT. militarily by Israel have been .Kanaaa Q ty pe M 70 fS Waahington pc eighth fasters to die. cumbed. than 100 gasoline bombs on the Egyptian President Anwar Sadat waves as he leaves airplane Lottery followers of Torrijos were at the airport to receive his “ All indications from ground tracking stations and the Laa V «a a ay U8 76 ..... WicblU pc The H-Block group — named for beleaguered New Barnsley police stalled for the past 18 months and Little fa B 73 .... The bloody Sunday riot left two three ARIA (support) aircraft are that the mission was Sadat blames Israel for the on arrival In London Sunday for a two-day official visit to body. British soldiers dead from an the part of Maze Prison housing the station. Police fired plastic bullets successful in placing the two satellites in orbit,” Dudon England. He Is meeting with British Prime Minister Margaret Only hours alter Torrijos’ death was confirmed. exploding land mine and a third IRA inmates — announced that to break up the crowds early today. stalemate. National Guard Chief of Staff Col. Florenclo Florez said. Eight hours before Doherty died In addition to a series of meetings Thatcher and other government officials. (UPI photo) Numbers drawn Satur­ Rhode Island daily; 4835. woiuided seriously in both legs when Liam McCloskey, 25, from Lynch’s Aguilar was appointed Sunday to succeed Torrljo as The Delta rocket, with nine motors producing one-half at 7:15 p.m., an IR A land mine with Reagan, Sadat will give a day in New Eifgland: New Hampshire daily; a Soviet-made RPG rocket smashed hometown of Dungiven, w ill replace commander-in-chiel of the guard. million pounds of thrust, carried the two satellites m ajor speech in New York during Connecticut daily; 437. 4864. into an armored personnel crurier. Lynch. A replacement for Doherty killed two policemen in County But it was uncertain who would em erge as the coun­ d n ig n ^ to study how energy from the sun interacts his U.S. v is it and re c e iv e an program “ U P I Roundtable” that to the whole purpose of Camp Vermont daily; 709. Massachusetts daily; Three other people were wounded in is expected in two to three days. Tyrone, about 45 miles west of try’s new leader and fill the vaccuum left by Torrijos. with space arouhd-the Elarth, a NASA spokesnun said. honorary degree from Georgetown Sadat will try to enlist American David. It rendered it meaningless.” Maine daily; 062. 5180. the wild rioting against backdrop of At present there are seven hunger Belfast. The bomb, hidden in a Almanac culvert, exploded underneath the University. support to halt Israel’s “ creeping flaming barricades. fasters. He will end his visit with a annexation” of the occupied West In the rrucabre chain of hunger Specifically, the inmates are police car. The dead officers were courtesy call Sunday on former Bank. fast deaths to gain political prisoner demanding the right to associate Andrew Woods, 50, and John Smith, Air quality report freely in prison, to wear their own 34. Woods was the father of six. President Jimmy Carter in Plains, “ We are all committed to the status, Kieran Doherty, 25, an IR A HARTFORD (U P I) - The state By United Press Internstlonal clothes, be exempt from prison Smith of three, Ga. Camp David process,” Ghorbal membw who was elected to the Department of Environmental Today is Monday, Aug. 3, the 215th day of 1981 with ISO Work, get extra mail and receive Later, a British soldier was badly Israel Prime Minister Menachem said. “ But the Palestinian autonomy Capitol Region Highlights Irish Parliament from his Maze Protection forecast unhealthy air to follow. reductions in sentences for time Begin is expected to come to the talks have had their problems, un­ Prison cell, died Sunday on the 73rd wounded when a Soviet-made RPG-7 quality across Connecticut for The moOli is moving toward its first quarter. rocket smashed into a troop carrier. United States about one month after fortunately, because of the attitude The morning stars are Mercury and Mars; An unidentified young girl was also Sa^t leaves. of the Israeli government. today. The DEP reported unhealthy air The evening stars are Venus, Jupiter and Saturn. \ seriously injure>l in the attack, Egyptian Amtassador Ghorbal in­ Ghorbal said the Begin govern­ quality Sunday in Greenwich. moths, despite the program’s lack of success. Those born on this date are under the sign of Leo. police said. dicated in an interview on the radio ment “ adopted measures contrary Bid withdrawn The foresty unit of the state Department of En­ List grows Famed World War H correspondent Ernie Pyie and Sdvitch's death vironmental Protection may pay as much as $2,000, actress Dolores del Rio were born on Aug. 3—ahe in 1900 half the amount the town spent on spraying for the and she in 1906. EAST H AR TFO R D — About 200 buildings in the EAST HARTFORD — Hamilton Test Systenw of Windsor Locks has withdrawn its application for a moths, town Sanitarian Robert J. Deptula said. On this date in history: We were hoodwinked' northeastern and southwestern sections of the town South Windsor was classified as having an have been added to a list of historically significant zoning variance to construct an auto emissions In 1492, Christopher Columbus set sail from l ^ i n for apparent suicide “ emergency” gypsy moth infestation by state en­ and architecturally interesting buildings by the test center. the “ New World” with a convoy of three sihall ships— The first of 17 such centers planned by Ham lltm tomologist John R. 'Anderson, o f the Connecticut the Santa Maria, the Nina and the Pinto — and fewer town's historic preservation survey team. marriage ended.' was scheduled to be built in Burnham Industrial Agrlcuttural Eixperiment Station, making it eligible than 100 men. WASHINGTON (UPI) - The The town survey of buildings, now in its second Ms. Spring said Payne was Park, a new development on Burnham Street. for state funds. In 1914, Germany declared war on France. The husband of NBC-TV correspon­ year, is funded by state and federal grants'totalling born in Dallas and grew up in Problems with negotiations for buying the land A total of 312 acres in town lost leaves to the following day Britain declared war on Germany and dent Jessica Savlteh apparently $14,000. The survdy is conducted street-by-street by Wichita Fails, Texas. He was apparently led Hamilton to withdraw its applica­ moths last year. World War I was udder way. conimitted suicide by iuuiging Editors fight hoaxes a fourmember survey team and volunteers. graduated fiWm Rice University tion. A total of ^,500 is available through the forestry In 1958, the American nuclear submarine “ Nautilus” himself in the basement of the The team hopes to create a permanent record of in 1958 and received a degree in The automobile emissions test system measures unit to reimburse 11 towns in the state which had completed the first voyage under the North Pole. couple’s fashionable town house, local architecture by taking pictures of the medicine at the Univeraity of the effectiveness of a vehicle’s anti-pollution “ emergency” moth situations. Bach town will be In 1975, a chartered airliner carrying workers from police say. When Washinjgton Post reporter as members of “ a control group” an early press release, I ’m not cer­ buildings, talking to local residents and Texas Southwestern medical NEW YORK (UPl) — Years ago, devices. Because this is the first center of this type reimbursed up to 50 percent of its spraying spen­ France crashed in a thick fog in southern Morocco, Dr. Dorald RoUie Payne, 45, a Janet Cook’s prize winning story using the pills. tain,” Coady said. homeowners and checking land records. School in Dallas in 1962. • it was a carefully orchestrated ding, a spokesman Sdid. killing ail 199 people aboard. gynecologist and obstetricimi, “ We were hoodwinked,” said UPI tO h the night of June 29, a man The team- cannot for an owner to preserve a to be built in the state, local zoning regulations do California campaign to provide about an 8-year-oId drug addict was not cover it. Sooth Windsor’s spraying program was not was' fo u ^ unconscious by his discovered to be untrue, she was Managing Editor Don Reed. identifying himself as calling from building. lie has been in private practice clothing for animals. noticeably successful, Deptula said, since the trees wife when she returned from “ Despite a lot of checking prior to the ^ y o r ’s Command Center in In its first phase last year, the team identified in obstetrics and gynecology More recently, it was a claim forced to resign. When the authen­ that were sprayed and them that weren’t had no ap­ New York Sunday morning. moving the story, we didn’t do Washington telephoned broad­ more than 350 buildings as either historically since 1970. Payne is also survived from Connecticut that a red, white ticity of New York Daily News parent difference, in the amount of leaves lost. Emergency personnel were un­ enough on this elaborate publicity casters and told them Mayor Marion significant or architecturally interesting. The first by four sons and a sister. and blue pickle had been developed. columnist Michael Daly’s column Waste exhumed The real effect of the program w ill not be known able to revive him. stunt.” Barry had been shot and critically year concentrated on the buildings in and around Ms. Savitch joined NBC News It was revealed, appropriately, on about riots in Ireland was until an egg count is done to assess the possible “ Foul play is not spspectod,” questioned, he also resigned. Details about Lady Diana’s wed­ wounded near his home. the downtown area, while this year’s work, spread JlanflyfBtPr Umilh in >1977 and is the principal the Fourth of July, 1979. ‘ e a s t WINDSOR — The state Department of En­ damage for next year. said Police Lt. W.O. Richie. When a journalist is caught ding dress were a closely held seerqt He said Barry was being taken to out to the town. wrrlter-reporter for the Saturday In May, a pill sqid to be made Police refused to comment on until Women’s Wear Daily publish^ Andrews Air Force Base. Obviously vironmental Protection says the removal of hun­ / Offtetal Manehetter Nmetptfpmr ediUons of “ NBC NigbUy News,” from p u lv e r i^ cockroaches and perpetrating a hoax, he or she is dreds of barrels of illegally buried waste near Ke- iW h e ^ a ralcide note was left. fired or ^sciplined. When people a front page sketch on the day familiar with backstop procedures, her NBC biography says. offering help for acne and anemia ment Park landfill can resume. The department USPS 327-500 Vol. C, No. 258 A qx^esm an at the District of before her marriage to Prince he gave a telephone number for the Check received During the IM poUtical con­ sufferers, was previewed with outside the media succeed in getting had halted work at the site for a month. Columbia Medical Exam iner’s a false story published, there are (Varies. It was based on what was center, which is a source of informa­ Group named PubUahed dally e z ^ t Sunday and certain holidays by ventions she was the podium cor­ elaborate publicity in New York. The D E P has spent two weeks reviewing a plan office said results of an autopsy described as a press release from tion during emergencies. « ^Wishing Co., Herald Square, respondent. In 1979-80, she con­ Washington televisipn stations few — if any — penalties for the from Commercial Disposal Co. of West Springfield WINDSOR LOCKS - The town has received a Mi nchctto*, Conn. 06040. Second c l i f t postnge pAld nt would be released today. Buckingham Palace that described WRC-TV and and WDVM-TV tributed reports for “ Prime broadcast irqiorts in June that the perpetrator. to remove the barrels by crane. check for $1,000 from the chairman of Dexter Corp. Payne and Ms. Savlteh were the dress in elaborate detail, broadcast the report. UPI moved a MARLBOROUGH — The Board of Selectmen has Manchester, Cqnn. POSTMASTER: Send aMress Time Saturday,” NBC News’ city’s mayor had been wounded, A story distributed May 28 by UPI The burled drums were found by the state in 1979. toward a M,500 bronze tuut of the late Gov. E lla T. married in March and moved “ slipped mysteriously pnder. the story quoting one of the stations, Ail named the Marlborough Association for Senior '' chan^ to The Manchester Herald, P.O. Boil 581, . weddy television magazine. based on calls from someone reported on the alleged “ cockroach Landfill owner Stanley Kement Sr. and his son were Grasso. Manchester, Conn. 06040. about two months ago into a new hormone” health pill developed and door” of a London fashion jour­ were forced to retract minutes Housing, a private, non-prbfit organization, as the Hqr earlier roles for NBC claiming-to be an aide. ordered to remove ail the drums by July 15, but The check, from David Coffin, board diainnan, townhouse near American nalist. later. town’s (jommunity Housing Development Corpora­ News includfd coverage of the On the eve of the royal wedding distributed by “ Jpsef Gregor,” who work was stopped last month when several-of the brings the fund to $1,820, according to First Select­ University, friends said. It was Buckingham Palace quickly Q>hfusing the situation was the tion. -TP to wport a deUvery problem, call 647- Senate and geinerdl assignments. last week, a prestigious fashion dai­ claimed to be an entomologist. UPI barrels wete found punctured and leaking. man Edward Savino. the second marriage for both. subsequently discovered Gregor characterized the WWD description accidental shooting of a police of­ The designation is limited to a 24-unit project for ! ? * ’ to 5:10 p.m. Monday She also has subsUtutedfor Tom ly publish^ a skeb^ of Lady Diana The number of barrels and the number containing The bust is scheduled to be delivered to Town NBC spokeswoman Ellen reaUy is Joseph Skaggs, 35, an in­ as “ a bogus and clever hoax.” ficer near Barry’s home. Barry the elderly, a housing project the association has 7 to 10 a.m. Saturday, Delivtey Brokaw.and Jane Pafiley on the Spencer’s gown, basdd on a com- hazardous wastes won’t be know until the excava­ Hall this month. It will be sculptured by Canaan ai^ Ehrlich in New V(3rfc refused It tunied out 24 hours later the himself was away from home and planned for three years. HmuH be 5 p.m. Monday thnwgh FWday and Iv “Today'* prograih; for TUm m i^que mysteriously slipped under structor at the School of Visual Arts tion work is completed, which the company estates tist Andrea Marschalk and cast in bronze. 7:39 a.n^ Saturday.- ~ ' comment except to say, “ We ex­ WWD description had only the color police and other aides could shed no The designation of the group amounts to an en­ Snyder on the “ Tonaorrow” Show the door of a London writer. in . will take eight to 10 weeks. The town will also honor the late governor tend our symi>athies to Ms. of the gown correct. light on the report he had been dorsement of the project by the Board of Selectmen Suggestod carrier rates are $1 JO sseekly, $5.12 for ofM and frequently has been a AU of the revelations turned out to Skaggs freely admits he is a Thursday by dedicating the newly-widened Rte. 75 fl5 .» for three months, Savlteh.” WWD editor Michael O w dy said wounded. and makes the association eligible for a $36,000 member of the puwl of reporten )>e hoaxes, the work of pranksters. painter and a “ performance artist” through town to Gov. Grasso. Previously known as A fam ily spokesvroman, Rober­ he still is not sOre whether WWD Police and the District of Colum­ grant from the state to buy 12 acres of land, have a and $61.40 for osie year. MaU rates a r e available 08i on “ Meet the Press.” Reporters and editors have who uses the medie as his Turnpike Road, the street will be renamed the Ella request. ta S p r i ^ hM Payne divorced was duped. bia Corporation (Counsel say their land survey done and pay legal fees. Prior to joining the networks, always Imd against false “ medium” to show how easily they Pay for spray T. Grasso Tur^ike. Dee Anderson Payne in 1980. “ We never said it was the dress. extensive investigation leads them The board approval it required to qualify for fun­ she worked from 1973-1977 at an stories from outside sources. can be duped. He said he spent The road borders Bradley International Airport An NBC biography published in The headline over the article in to suspect a disgruntled former ding, either a grant or loan, under the state’s Com­ To |dace a classified or display adv«rtisement, or to NBC affUlate in PhUadelphia, EarUer this year, a ficUtious story several thousand dollars and rented SOUTH WINDSOR — ^ state will partially from the Windsor town Ihte io the Suffjeld town report a news ltem,> story or tocture idea, call 643-niL the feu of 1980 said Ms. Savlteh, WWD says ‘Is this the dress?’ and employee in the Mayor’s Omunand munity Housing Development Corporation where she was a general assign* caused a Pulitzer Prize to be an o f f i c e fo4r a m o n th a s reimburse the town for the cost of its war on gypsy line. ' * O ffice hours are 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday t*>roogh S3, married Mel Korn on Jan. 6, then we said 'Is the document Center, but they could find no law Program. ment reporter and retulmed, and demonstrated the headquarters for a research group Friday. 1980. It was not Immediately authentic?’ It could very well have that was v io la te . anctorwoman. vulnerability of the media to false he named Metamorphosis. He known erben Ms. Savitch’s first been a hoax, but it could have been sloi les by its own meihbers. enlisted friends and students to pose ' vi. 5 S iw

THE HERALD, Mon,, Aug. 3, 1981 — 5 4 - THE HERALD. Mon., Aug. ». 1861 '' Directors mull use Making most of day in court land it is negotiating to buy. The side,” he said. “Maybe it’s my lack Still, his tenacity has taxed the might be stolen. The Board of Directors will con­ By Martin Kearns Stoll has gone to great lengths in .; company plana to construct a Herald Reporter of expertise.” patience of both O’Neill and Assis­ sider on Tuesday an Economic warehouse-office-showrooin com- Stoll is an accomplished man. He tant State’s Attorney Peter Pon- preparing his case. He has sub- Development Commission peoned the arresting officer, Santo plex. The case of Milton Stoll of South is president of the Research Instru­ zlani. At one point O’Neill asked recommendation to open a P*'J** The company Initially plana to Windsor, arrested March 17 for ment Co. Inc. of South Windsor. Ponzlani, “Is there some way other Franzo, for two afternoons; the indua^Uy soned land near Union construct an 80.000 to 90.000 square speeding, continues to take up court During World War U he was chief than jhrough a trial that we can dis­ supervisor of the state police’s radio ; Pond for industrial development. foot facility and later expand it to time. inspector for a company which pose of this case?” division, Leonard McPharlen, and a The hoard will also consider a Stoll was arrested on St. Patrick’s like most judges faced with long radio technician whose poor health proposed sale of 10 aores of tte 1 ^ 225,000 square feet. Director of developed the radar used by our Planning and Economic Develop­ Day in Marlborough. State police armed forces. He also has a dockets, O’Neill is concerned about spared his attendance. to Economy Electric Supply Co. for ment Alan F. Lamson told the ^ say their radar clocked him doing 72 m aster’s degree from the time. He said to Stoll, “It would He also has assembled an im­ industrial development. Economic Development Commis­ m.p.h. along Route 2 in a 55 m.p.h. Polytechmio Institute of Brooklyn. seem to me that in the interest of pressive array of documents. They If the town decides to develop tte include copies of National Weather sion last month. ‘zone. He argues that the radar was But his trial creates a puzzling judicial economy that this matter be land, it will maintoin access to Both the Economic Develop­ in error and that he was actually situation: It haX tied up the court for disposed of between you and the Service forecasts, state Department recreational areas proposed for the ment Commision and the Plannihg gAing 53 m.p.h. two afternoons at a time when its state’s attorney.” of Transportation photographs of Route 2 and legal guides from the pond frontoge by the H ^ n u m and Zoning Commission have ap­ Stoll has represented himself caseload of more serious crimes is But the case runs a fine line that River Linear Park Commlttw. proved the land sale to Economy. throughout his trial in Manchester Increading. Beginning Tuesday the O’Neill has watched carefully. “I’m University of Connecticut School of The town owns approximately 43 The EDC has asked for jurisdic­ Superior Court. '.He is scheduled local court will begin hearing B and not suggesting that you be denied Law. He said comparable work acres in the area, including the town from an attorney would cost him tion over the industrial parcel. Hie Wednesday to give his closing argu­ C class felonies. your right to a trial,” he added. gravel pit. < . EDC is now in charge of the ment and already he is prepared to It raises a question pf priorities. For O’Neill, Ponzianl — and for $500-a-day. Economy Electric wants to buy Buckland Industrial Park. appeal to a bigiier court. He’s not “Where are we in this epic?” Judge Stoll — the trial has provided some Before Stoll’s last hearing, O'Neill the land and combine it with an sure which one. Brian O’Neill said Friday as the long afternoons. More than half an slipped in another court trial for adjacent plot of privately owned Stoll is not a lawyer and, judging trial began a second afternoon. hour was spent Friday searching for another person charged with from his first courtroom perfor­ At the same time, the court must exhibits lost from the previous speeding. After 45 minutes of mance, he could use one. Only a cou­ recognize Stoll’s ri^ t to a trial. As hearing. testimony, the verdict was given. ple of the many books, documents, one court worker said during the As it turned out, Stoll had_ taken Guilty. Board to consider m aps, and 'slides he tried to in­ first hearing, “Everybody has their them from the courtroom a‘ week earlier and had misplaced, one Milton Stoll’s trial will end — troduce as evidence were accepted day in court.” presumably — on Wednesday. If the exhibit. The hearing ended at 5:30 by the court. In most instances the For Stoll the trial is essential. verdict goes against him, he can be Milton Stoll leaves court Friday with some of the. material ha reason was the same — a failure to “I’m convinced that I|m not guilty.” p.m. — half an hour late — and the renovation project used to defend himself against a speeding charge. (Herald expected to appeal. establish a proper foundation. He says radar in unreliable and courtroom emptied. No one took the photo by Kearns) “Mv hands are tied on every police radar training is deficient. exhibits Stoll said he thought thev The Board of Directors is major project. Plans call for scheduled to consider on Tuesday moving the Sheltered Workshop night spending tW,000 for repair and from the building’s first floor to rmovation of throe town b w d i ^ . Bennet Junior High School, which The work will include Interior will be closed as a school. 3 Town departments in other parts Band Shell launches renovations at Lincoln Center, Lauren Cabie, ,14, feeds the Infant wild rabbit she found while at brought up from Infancy. (Herald photo by Pinto) replacement of gutters and paint to of town, including the Health a friend's farm. Aorll. left. Is a domestic hare Miss Cable the exterior trim at the Town Hall Department and the Data and flooring and paint to the Processing Center, will be moved to Lincoln CenUr, under current plans. exterior at the Mary Cheney •;f.T Entering Vo-Ag program Library. drive for members The <42,000 needed to renovate Lincoln Crater is expected to come . A membership drive to attract The Band Shell is run by “We want to encourage people to Forgo rty volunteers. become a part of the Whole Band from the sale of the former Senior support for the Manchester Citlxra Center on Linden Street to A. Bicentennial Band Shell is LaBonne said the Band Shell (X>r- Shell,” LaBonne said. “Even though Lee and Beverly B. Burton. scheduled to start this summer. poeration hopes to “create a class of we’re asking for a small fee, we The building will be sold for <83,- resigns George “Ted” LaBonne, presi­ members from which new board really want to get their interest and Freshman loves farming 000, if the Board of Directors ap­ dent of the Band Shell Corporation, members can be developed” involvement. proves. It will be used as a dance General Manager Robert B. Weiss said plans for a membership drive through the membership drive. “We’re not looking to make studio. The Board will consider on has accepted the resignation of will be presented to the facility’s Prospective members will be money. We’re looking to get First she wiped the rabbit off to the abandoned animal is a wide- people.” By Hilary Rosenberg raising April, a rabbit of the New Tuesday an ordinance allowing the James F. “Dutch” Fogarty as Board of Directors at its August asked to indicate their Interests for remove all evidence of human eyed, 3Vii-ounce-rabbit that spends committees or volunteer work on a LaBonne said the structure of the Herald Reporter Z eala^ I^ench Lop breed Now five sale. director of civil preparedness. meeting. LaBonne said he hopes to months old, April has grown into a handling. Then she placed the tiny its day hopping around the back The money for the work on the Fogarty was nominated by local get the drive underway by the end of memtership form. membership program may change 5_: . . ' yard. in the future as the Band Shell Lauren Cable of 21 Buckland Road large bail of fur with long ears that creature on a blanket in the woods other buildings is already in the Democrats last week to run for the August. LaBonne said the Band Shell Cor­ has two very different loves in life: will eventually flop over. near her home, where many wild Miss Cable is working on two Capital Improvement Fund. Board of Directors. poration has been working on the develops. ballet and farm animals. rabbits live. farms near Lebanon. As well as “The town has benefited for many, Tile membership drive will be membership eoncept for the past “I’m not saying we won’t have a Recently April gained a room­ Repairs and renovations to the chaired by Dita Ziickerman” This summer the 14-year-old mate when Miss Cable found an in­ The next day, the rabbit was gone, sharing in all the work of the farms, Mary Cheney Library are expected years from your role as director of year. Before a membership time when we’ll want to expand and Rockville High School freshman is presumably taken by a caring including picking vegetables and this support and operation (civil LaBonne said. program could be implemented, have family memberships and fant wild rabbit that had apparently to cost <12,500 and the work on the Interested people will be asked to concentrating on her love for farm been abandoned. The frail animal mother hare. But that evening it milking cows, she will aid in the Town Hall carrira a .<12,000 price prepar^ness) and I want you to however, the organization had to patrons for $1,000 a person, but animals. In preparation or her first reappeared near the blanket. So, delivery of calves. know that we particularly ap­ contribute “a small membership amend its certificate of incorpora­ that’s not what we’re looking for weighed only about two ounces and tag. (. fee” in order to become sustaining year in the school’s Vo-Ag still had its eyes closed. Although Miss Cable took it home. New copper gutters and drip preciate the fact that you have con­ tion, a formality which was ap­ now,” LaBonne said. The Cable family recently moved members or incorporators, LaBonne estimated that more (vocational-agricultural) program, Miss Cable’s friends doubted the Using an eyedropper she fed the edges are to be installed at the Town tin u e this position in an unpaid proved recently. A to Buckland Road from a more , LaBraAe said. Miss Cable is raising two rabbits wild rabbit would survive. Miss infant with a formula of egg yolk, Hall, according to bidding instruc­ capacity since your retirement from LaBonne said he hopes to start than 46,000 people will attend events crowded residential neighborhood in this summer. A total of 38 events, and working on a dairy farm. Cable determined she would try to com syrup and evaporate milk. tions issued last month. All exterior full-time town employment (last For. their contribution, members handing out membership forms and Vernon, partly to give Miss Cable averaging 1,000 people per concert, About four months ago she began Now, two weeks after it was found. wood surfaces a t the Town Hall are spring),” wrote Weiss in a July 31 will receive programs and notices of brochures at Band Shell events by help it. more land to raise animals in the were scheduled at the Band Shell, to receive two coats of oil-based letter to Fogarty. special events at the Band Shell. the end of August. In addition, the future, her mother, Shirley Cable, which is located on the campus of paint, the instructions read. Fogarty was a town flref Irtler ra- ' They will also have the,right to at­ corporaloh will place adver­ said. “Her happiest moment is when Manchester Communjity (College. she has a calf on each shoulder The w ork.at the libaiy will in­ til he suffered a heart attaAx in IWO. tend the annual meeting and vote for tisements in local newspapers to at­ slobbering ail over her,” Mrs. Cable clude exterior painting and installa­ Since then, he worked at a variety of members of the Board of Directors. tract members,, he said. said. tion of new floor tiles and carpetiAg. town jobs, including director of civil Lincoln Center’s renovation is the preparedness. n Public records Hot at the top General Equities to David L. and Notice of condemnation Quitclaim deeds as he painted the highest section of his Richard P. Bohadik to Joan C. Richard A. Thibodeau, unit 583-5 of State of Connecticut, Com­ Some Jobs must be undertaken even when missioner of Transportation, ' house while standing on the roof. (Herald G -Bohadik, 23 Nye St. Crest Condominiums. it’s hot, and John JaworskI of 167 Vernon St. * Harold L. Ross Jr. to Barbara J. Gleneral Equities to Robert A. property owned by Manchester undertook a treacherous job this weekend photo by Pinto) Ross, Lot 33, “Lookout Mountain, Szykula, unit 571-81 to Crest Con­ Sports (Center Inc., John T. Larabee, Section One, Spring Street.” dominiums. president, property off Tolland / Robert E. Dunfleld to Margaret General Ekiuities to Robert A. Turnpike. jDunfleld, Lot 105, “Oak Grove Szykula, unit 583-1 of (Oest Con­ State of Connecticut, Com­ missioner of Transportation, H elo ts Addition.” dominiums. { Bruno Aliezi to Lois S. Aliezi, I/>t Barney T. Peterman Sr. and Jr. to property off Buckland Street owned by Herman M. Frechette and Albert More time 2, Block 3 of the “Foster Farm Thomas J. and Patricia K. ndominlums. Release of lien United States Internal Revenue handling the sale of Mae Wichman’s land, was available * No extra charge for groups—charms not in Service against James and Jean for comment this morning. package of group picturea Moriconi, 25 Thayer Road, for $12,- Anderson said the extended option will continue to buy • Additional packages only $12.00/no deposit time for Utility, which is waiting to hear from the 3 126.51. • Beautiful backgrounds available Fire caiis Department of Housing and Urban Development Release of attachment * You muat be eatisfied with portraits or deposit O. and H. Paving (instruction Co. whether an extra $200,000 in housing subsidies will be cheerfully refunded ■ Poses our selection Manchester Saturday, 5:06 p.m. -W ater ball Inc. against Multi-Circuits Co. Inc. Tag sale tedium f at 262 Broad St. (Town) Judgment lien **HUD*has already approved $546,272 in subsidies for Friday, 9:32 p.m. —Electrical Sunday, 9:02 a.m. —Food burning First Bank against Joseph the project, but Rothstein claims he cannot go forward Having something to read when you have no Drive demonstrates during a slow spell at a problem at 14 Winter St. (Town) on a stove at 50 Pascal Lane. Beaulieu, 81 Lyness St.-for $1,066. without the extra $200,000. HUD’S Washington office is considering the request customers Is an Important part of a succesful sale at 114 Kennedy Road. (Herald photo by (Town) Tax lien United States Internal Revenue Anderson said there is stiU no news on whether HUD total package price tag sale, as Joanne Labarces of 101 Downey Pinto) Two killed Sunday, 9:20 a.m, -G as deposit washdqwh following an accident in­ Service against James F . and Linda will grant the extra $200,000. BURLINGTON (UPI) — SUte volving a motorcycle and a car in L. McDonald, 111 Wells St., for $1,- The Planning and Zoning Commission has alreadyra- Extra Special I police today Investigated an acci­ front of 329 E. Center St. (Towp) 590.16. proved a preliminary site plan for the project, which 10X13 dent involving two cars and a motoi^ will include 82 three-bedroom units. 58 two-bedroom un­ Ask About Our - Sunday, 18:28 p.m. —Medical call Jud^ent Hen - (11X14 matted) Decorator Portrait Strike enters third week Aycle which left the cycle operator (injured ankle) at the horse show Society for Savings against Linda its'and 20 single-bedroom units. ' and a passenger dead. L. Brooks, unit 70A in Building Six, Blackstone Boulevard home, which plant workers sparked the strijce held at the BldweU Street campus of PROVIDENCE, R.I. (UPI) - '■ State police said the nwtorcycle Manchester Community College. Forest Ridge Condominiums, for PHOTOORAPHiB'i HOUBt has been under armed police guard July 20 when they walked off their Deadlocked negotiations dragged operated by John T. L w l i ^ . 84, of <219.58. Man charged In. fight since last week because of alleged jobs to protest reductions in (Town) Tuot., Wad.. Sot. 10-1,2-6 the illegal strike by more than 1,000 Canton was northbound on Route IW Sunday, 4:16 p.m. -M edical call Attachment qf real estate muncipal blue collar and clerical union threats. guaranteed overtime hours. Union w)ien it nttenq)ted to a v ^ c le Hartford NatiouaiBank and Trust BOLTON — John Mayhem, 19, of 21 Mount Sumner Thurt., Fd. 10-1,2-5:30,6-6 The labor dispute, now in its 15th members in. nearly- every city at 400 Tolland 'Turnpike. (Town) workers into its third week today. orarated by Jeffrey H olsw o^ of Sunday, 9:51 p.m. -C am pfire in Co. against James F, Kearney, 969 Dr., was arrested Saturday at the Manchester Drive-In L u n ch 1to 2 day, shifts to Superior Court department followed the next day. The weekend failed to bring both Simsbury about 10:25 p.m.'Satur- the woods near siw Broad St. (Town) Tollam Turnpike, for <7,000. after allegely being involved in a fight, police said. Tuesday when the city plans to seek Thev said he was charged with dlsoi^rly conduct sides together after opening on an Cianci fired the garbage workm dsy. . Administratrix’s deed I b Your Portrait Store. contempt charges against about 100 after the 1:45 a.m. incident. He was released on a (^timUtic note Friday when talks for joining the walkout, the second The motorcycle collided with a Shirley E. McKay for the estate of critical workers who have ignored written promise to appear in Rockville Superior Court . resumed. Negotiators left the time they had refused to work in a •outhbound vehicle operated by Now you know - Roland Walter Bendell to Jaines J , ' bargaining table still far apart on two back-to-work orders. Leroy Lawrence of Newington, Aug. 18, police said. month. He abolished the city sanita­ According to the federal Office of Faulkner and Sheila M. Donnelly, the issue of 51 garbagemra who “If we don't settle this thing by killing Lasclnskl and Nancy 342 Hilliard St., tor <56,500. Monday, we have court on Tuesday. tion department ahd hired United Management and Budget, the totol Guide to weekend events ' were fired by Mayor Vincent A. Sanitation C!orp., a private contrac­ 26. of Bristol, who was a Judgment lien Cianci Jr. after they joined the We can’t lose that case Tuesday. passenger on the motocycle. nuniber of hours, spent by The Herald provides a comprehensive calendar of tor, to do the job. American people (illing out fa<^al • Beneficial Finance Co. against We’re giving them a grace period by The accident was under investiga­ “where to go and what to do,” every Friday in the walkout. forms in the course of ayear is 784,- Delores M. Carnelli, 11 Plano Plara, "No. there’s nothing new to report negotiating with them,” Cianci said. tion and ho charges had bam fUed as for <1,897.25. Focus/Weekend section. today." Cianci said Sunday from his Sixty-seven sewage treatment of Sundav night. sUte police said. <62,000. THE HERALD, Mon., Aug. 3, 1981 - 7 ft - THE HERALD. Mon., Aug. S, 1981 Herpes victims warned on self-treatment

silver sulfadiazine, nonoxynol-9, steroid creams and victims, the sores flare up again intermittently, Commentary ATLANTA (UI^I) — A new federal health pamphlet said, are vidarablne, idoxuridine and ribavirin. opinion / Other Ineffective treatments cited by Guinan were dimethyl sulfoxide. Another form of the herpes simplex virus that warns people with incurable genital herpes against The genital herpes simplex virus causes sores in the produces the genital sores also causes the common using worthless, sometimes dangerous treatments like ether, vitamins C, E and B-l2, lactobacilus tablets, diets, the chemical agent 2-deoxy-d-glucose, zinc, the genital area that may last for days, spontaneously “ cold sores” that periodically break out on a person s polio vaccine, vitamin B-12 and ether. amino acid lyzine, povidone-iodine, dye-Il^t therapy. healing with or without treatment. In 90 percent of the Hps, mouth or nose. "M irthing that’s got the word ‘herpes’ on it will sell,” says Dr. Mary Guinan of the national Centers for C TV A © '9»i n p WOWM 5W«.TClF6«ftM. Manchester Spotlight Disease Control’s venereal disease control division. UUIV\C There is no proven cure for genital herpes, but the NC\\ CDC has been so Inundated with queries about supposed cures it is distributing a pamphlet warning victims of the painful disease that treatments will bring them no CHOICEST MEATS IN TOWN A planner's good idea rellet and might be dangerous. Ms. Guinan wrote the pamphlet and has completed work on a medical paper that names the different kinds DELI SPECIALS of treatments being sold and separates them into four MEAT DEPT. SPECIALS Normally when officials of the The neighbors were fepred categories: vaccines, inunune stimulants, aiiti-virals OUR OWN n n town administration comes up with someone would find a legal way to and other treatments. MEDALLION some sort of an idea that involves get rid of the fence later and convert Although no accurate figures are available, an es- Blue Him n *2.99 tinnated 5 million to 20 million people have the aliment, something new, it is greeted by the A l e x the drive to a road. GORMSH GAME HNS . N). IMPORTED GENUINE SWITZERLAND g%g% The developer offered to dead end which Ms. Guinan said is “ probably the most public with a good deal of skep­ widespread of all the venereal diseases.” Each year, an ticism if not outright suspicion. c k i r e l l l the drive at a grass buffer strip. The U.8.DJL CHOICE (LONDON BROIL) SWISS besE »*2.99 neighbors liked that. Alan Lamson, additional 400,000 contract genital herpes. That is particularly true when the "The apparent high prevalence of this infection and MUCKE’S MfW Herald the town planner, did not. BONELESS SHOGLOER STEAK .. lb. idea involves doii^ something that the lack of effective treatment combine to make the City Editor Fire engines cannot turn about on will make a physical change in the topic of a ‘cure’ of interest not only to those afflicted but U.8.D.A. CHOICE COOKED SALAMI n ’ 1 . 9 9 face of the town. a dead-end driveway and that also to health care personnel frustrated by their Inabili-. Pe«H>le are inclined to ask what bothered Lamson. ^^to^.offer relief to beleaguered patients,” said Ms. BONELESS SHOULDER ROAST . . . l b . the angle is, who is benefitting un­ There the matter rested at the end Guinan. PROVOLONE CHEESE » 2 . 1 9 fairly, what long-range scheme is of a public hearing. But Lamson did Some of the ineffective treatments people use in hopes U.8.D.A. CHOICE of getUhg rid of their infections include vaccines for behind the idea. It is refreshing to be able to report not rest. smallpox, polio, tuberculosis, yellow fever, influenza, Another normal phenomenon in He thought and came up with a TOP BLADE STEAK tt». the occasional exceptions to these and a German vaccine for herpes not licensed In this eolEN n»2.39 community democracy is the norms of conunwity political life. simple camouflage. Keep the driveway, he said, but don’t pave it country. TABLE TREAT OUR OWN B A tendency of citizens to raise phony The Main Strwt renovation and “ Vaccines are approved for use in the United States in the ordinary way. or at least peripheral issues when the Multi-Circuits mess make a lot only for the prevention of disease, not for its STEAK UMM...... 14 ox. Use paving blocks, he said, and let nESHcnisuw .98* they want to oppose some project of copy, and the newspaper that did treatment,” she said. “ The use of any vaccine for the the grass grow up between them so "May I suggest one more little clarification to go with your next foreign that makes a change in the not print it Would certainly be treatment of HSV Infection has no obvious rationale and RATH appearance or the atmosphere of remiss in its duty. | the path won’t look like a road and constitutes misuse of the vaccine.” won’t present a temptation to use it as Ineffective Immune stimulants being used Include the policy statement?" , - their neighborhood. But the Oakland Street con­ MGKORY SMOKED BACON . . .lb. pkg. drugs L-tetramIsole, inosiplex and Interferon, the latter GARDEN FRESH A silly sort of example would be dominiums, which did not generate a road. the claim that a building should not a lot of Inches of type in the press Apparently everyohie liked his a natural body substance undergoing testing in cancer research. PRODUCE SPECIALSAtkA be permitted because it would shade are really quite as important. idea. tcUh coupon ft 7.S 0 purchuc Anti-vlral agents that are not effective, Ms. Guinan iHIh coupon e r.*0 pnrcSoco . ...l b . An editorial a pond and make it a less desirable Here is what happened there. All this is no big deal, maybe, but FRESH GREER PEPPERS...... habitat for some kind of wildlife. Samuel Chorches proposed to it does illustrate that the democratic ■ ■ .M. The public give and take promoted build condominiums. A group of government does not have to be one LYSOL big headline-grabbing battle. STERLINB . , . 5 9 < when such'an administrative notion neighbors objected that the condo But lithium DEODORIZING PLUMS, FRIAR, URODA.SIMKA... becomes public is the standard fare won’t present a temptation to use it When the neighbors said they SALT of the community newspaper. aS a road. objected to the drive, they meant aeoz. CLEANER Hospital is immuno^ just that. And nobody has suggested 28 OZ. So are the publicly expressed The developer, who needed the SEEDLESS GRAPES...... reasons and rationalizations for drive oply for emergency vehicles, a sinister motive in Lamson’s little seen hetpful protesting something some people proposed to put a fence across it to trompe I’oeil or found a hundred tREE wrong in a specific criticism. It with disabling. It is difficult to determine how don’t want done. keep out general traffic. reasons why it won’t work. There is one institution in NEW HAVEN (UPI) — A Yale University professor well the 911 emergency number seems that no matter how many VAUn AUOA TO AUO. S ; VAUO AUOA TO AUO. t . ALL PURPOSE PVTATOES • 1 . 4 9 , Manchester, however, that is says lithium may be helpful in treating symptoms of system is working. It depends a people of good will try to recon- herpes virus and other disorders in addition to its immune from the ailment. That great deal on who you talk to. cile neighborhood and ' current use for treating such p^chiatric problems as is Manchester Memorial Under the surface, and departmental differences, those depression. nnM BBBB«B188B81BllBBllBBB Hospital, a community hospital Open forum / Readers' views sometimes openly, there are differences crop up. Dr. Julian Lieb said herpes sores were reduced and in some cases disappeared when doses of the metallic ele­ One is led to wonder, in the with widespread support and no hints or charges that the dis­ Send letters to: The Manchester Herald, Herald Square, Manchester, CT 06040 ment were administered to 10 of his psychiatric patients axe to grind. patchers at the police station did light of the 911 reservations, who also suffered from the virus. TUESDAY ONLY We wonder, if the Emergency not inform the right people or whether the community should Lieb, an associate professor of psychiatry at Yale Medical Services Council gave t 4 on U.S.D.A. CHOICE did not inform the right people set up a paramedic system Medical School, said lithium also apparently abated SM ITHFfELD the hospital’s plan adequate other ailments, some virus-related. In his patients — at the right time in an emei*gen- within (or almost within) one of It's good to know TOP ROUND STEAK the fire departments, as it is thought tefore it decided against hay fever, sinus inflammation, chronic sore throats, IdOMESTIC COOKED HAM cy. poison ivy raAes and chronic colds. now planning to do. it. A hospital-administered plan Some of these problems and cynical, it’s good to know that Saturday memorable was not so Lieb, quoted in Sunday’s New Haven Register, said QO U.S.D.A. CHOICE would have some disadvantages. To the editor: {LAND O LAKES supposed problems are bugs that It would be a shame if a ser­ A funny thing happened on the Manchester has such a person of rnucb getting the check back as the his patients suffered from one of five types of herpes One of them is that the town CUBE STEAK as will be worked out. Some of vice so vital, and so costly, has way to the bank Saturday. honesty and integrity. There may fact that you returned it. viruses. . • ^ AMERICAN CHEESE Among the five were the genital herpes simplex virus, them stem from the rivalries to be subject police-fire, town- would have to contract for the Somewhere between work and the even be more! It’s such good news I Joan O’Laughlin which the NaUonal Center for Disease Control says is district tensions. service and the public that pays bank my paycheck disappeared. wanted to share it. 55 Fairview St. that occur, despite the desire on probably the most widespread venereal disease, afflic­ for it would lose some measure Thank you again, sir. What made the part of everyone to make the To mention those tensions at Actually it wasn’t so funny. You ting 5 million to 20 million people in the United States. system work well. all is indelicate nowadays, and of control over it. know that empty feeling you get The herpes viruses cause a variety of symptoms, in­ ISo Substitute The hospital has not pushed its when you finally realize that We Give Old Fashioned The situation leads one to whoever speaks of them runs the cluding the common “ cold sore,” genital sores, shingles For Quality something is really lost. wonder if there will not always risk of being accused of fomen­ role, and, in fact, worked out a and chicken pox. , : , ^ Butcher Sehiice ... plan at the request of the town. It could have been a disaster Genital herpes is ah incurable and chrqnlc InfecUoh, be discontent as long as we have ting conflict. except for this remarkable man. He which has shown a statistical link to cervical cancw. To deny that the dis­ The lack of pressure on the part Berry's World the combination of two fire called to say that he had found my Lieb said the herpes t^ p tom s flared anew when his agreements exist, however, is a o f the hospital m ay b e a sign that STORE HOURS: departments and, of course, a check (my endorsed check). I don’t "• patients s t o p ^ taking Uthium or when the dosage was it would ^ in the most comfor­ 317 Highland S t single police department. head-in-the-sand device. The even know his name. He just gave reduced. „ . , Mon. A Tues. 'IR 6KHI table position to administer the He said one of his patients, an elderly woman suf­ It is pointless to try to deter­ tensions wax and wane like me back my check. fering from herpes sores around the lips, was given 1,200 chronic discomfort that hurts program . Wed., Thurs., A Fri. til 9KH) MANCHESTER mine who is right and who is At a time when we can so often be iriiiiigrflms of lithium carbonate a day for five months. Over the period, the sores disappeared, Lieb said. Sat A Sunday Six weeks after the lithium dosage was reduced by 300 ’tfl 6KKI CONN. milligrams, the sores reappeared, but the woman again nZCHLiLlTB FJL remained free of them for a year after the larger dosage Corporations are not giving was restored, Lieb said. ^ Lieb cautioned that his observations, published in the July issue of Medical Hypotheses, were not based on a Only 35 percent corporate gifts in When Ronald Reagan was can­ controlled clinical study. didate Reagan, he assured those 1979 were devoted to what the He believes lithium’s success in curbing herpes symp­ among us frightened by his budget American Associations of Fund toms may be its ablUty to chemically balance the body’s proposals that the private sector Raising Counsel calls ’ ’health and immune response system and Inhibit the production of — ^^wnwwwz \my C FROZEN & DAIRY would take up the burden of helping Julian Bond welfare.” Prospects for increases in prostaglandins, or fatty acids. GROCERY SPECIALS such gifts, or for an incriease in the A m u a iv n the deserving poor. BUY ONE BET ONE FREE Since his swearing^n ceremony Syndicated Columnist number of donors is not great. APPLE JUICE •1.19 k o cMiiA>r'a \ 0 / Q Q « seven months ago. the president and “ You cannot send a Mailgram LA PIZZERIA Death claims SQU^MUtTAIIO ...... :..io.5oi. 0 / 0 0 welfare, health, the environment, job-training will mean increases up from Washington to all corporations his advisers have made the same a IN CH __ Q C | 8 CHEESE SNACK SLICE...... »... • 2 .9 9 claim again and again — private ef­ the arts, and for publicly financed to $600 million in the food stamp and say a funny thing happened, and PAPER------PUTES .100 01. O O forts would replace government housing between 1981 and 1984. Non­ program — increases a conservative expect they w'ill bd jready im­ nauioNTi or aaw heart patient .lOoz. / < ^__ assistance for the needy. profit organizations working in congress is sure to reject. In 1982, mediately to make up the shortfall CUT aRBN NANS 3 99 MARINO — ORANGE or WATERMELON Corporate and Individual these fields will lose billion in the food stamp benefit level must be — life is not like that,” says a HANUIWRAP...... 30011. • 1.49 public funds over the next five reduced further to extend benefits to spokesman for the American philanthropy, it was argued, would HOUS’TON (UPI) — Heart surgeon Denton Cooley, zinLocK ITAUAN ICES...... constitute a 1986s version of the years. newly eligible beneficiaries forced Telephone and Telegraph Co. iiV k . .20 ct. 99« CiWbvNiA.lnc. saddened and disappointed b y the death of a Dutchman NEW — CHOC, YELLOW, CREME FILLED church poor box. Encouraged by the But 1980s gifts from the private- onto the rolls by the ad­ Cbrporate giving declined in 1990. a n LOCK OALLON who lived 54 hours on a plastic heart and a wrek on a . 20 cl. • tax breaks given to business and sector corporations and company- ministration’s austerity elsewhere. At 1979 levels, it reached only $2.45 transplanted human heart, says he hopes his effort will BTURACECAQS...... 1.09 DOW OREGON FARMS CUP CAKES . . .1° operated foundations totaled only So yesterday’s cuts create billion a year. accelerate artificial heart development. upper-income Americans, a flood of lATHmOMClEAlKR.... .1701. •1.09 WINDBROOK DO< charity would be released to $2.5 billion. These gifts would have tomorrow’s costs, and no one seems Perhaps the Japanese, who have “The Naw Right Tabernacle Choir wants to run WiUebrordus A. Meuffete, 38, a tourjbua driver who shoulder the human burden govern­ to increase by 144 percent to make to know or care who’ll pay. successful out-manufactured and along aide and sing ‘Happy Trails To You. flew to Houston from the Netherlands July 21 to be JUMMTublEU ...... 73* ORANGE JU IC E ...... i .o * .™ According to some businesses, it treated by Cooley, died Sunday at St. Luke’s Episcopal WHITI CLOUb ment has shrugged off. up for government reductions and to out-sold American businesses will TOILET TICtUE...... Srollpk. EQQO I S O9 That burden is considerable. keep pace with inflation. won’t be them. Less than one-third be willing to step in and do their Hospital of kidney failure, lung problem and i n f ^ r a . Drath came seven days after Cool^ replai^ the HHiHnoiNr . ____ WAFFLES...... iio*,“ T h e Urban Institute in Some of the .Reagan cuts, as of the two million companies doing share. ..'.Soz. temporary plasUc pump that kept Meuffels alive 54 OECAFFMATEPCOPPtt..... Washington, D.C., estimates that expected, will cause higher costs. business in the United States t o ^ They can probably out-give their noLoanra m m . omn or nLacrnA boors with the heart of a brain-dead Teimessee telte .lb. there will be reductions of 8128.2 Slashes in spending for welfare, make any kind of philanthropic ^ ft competition, too.' “ Needless to say, it’s a disappointment to us, Cooley COPFB.:...... POPSICLEJRS...... billion in federal spending for social unemployment compensation and at all. Newspaper Elnterprise’'A8sn.) said “Nevertheless we can point to certain ac- 'l0.l.boMI. • S . S O compUshments of the « ^ r ie n c e nainely w ag^^^ USUIOOETEAQEIIT...... NUFORM demonstrated that human life could be sustained with a 0A8H...... lOObZ. •2.99 FRIRT YOGURTS...... mechanical heart.’^ LAND O’ LAKES “ I’m b o p ^ l that ItvrtU encourage others who are in­ W T rwib. Reagan should not befriend Teamsters H iaK M B IB ..2IIMr p r o s t e ^ from the laboratory in «je9p«ate rituaUons VBWNiON NMMB ....^...... •••PTrs such as we encountered in t t o patient. , , . . . Snokeswoman Haiel Haby s a l d ^ transplanted heart years for using every deceitful “ The major shortcoming in the management of the pension fund. WASHINGTON — President f u f f i d ^ & Se end: “It WM the other com­ system was that it was based on 100 means possible to thwart govern­ plications that simply overwhelmed him. , ^ . Reagan raised a few eyebrows by in- percent willingnesa of the fund to ment investigations into their pen-.- Meuffels was Cooley’s 28rd heart tnuisplant patient, liiiiiititiiiii IIIBBIIIUII lW ' '. viting Teamsters President Roy Lee shm fund. Yet Marshall’s Labor cooperate with the. Labor ^ i l h coupon e 7.50 purrk.ii^ Williams to the White House a few and the second to receive an artificial heart. roupon & 7..10 purrlMi^j Department chose not to usb its sub­ Depsrtment,” the Senate report UltmfliPBtrr Hrntld days after the union boss had been Jack Anderson Cooley appeared to have weathered questions raised poena powers to obtain pertinent states. “ But that degree of coopta­ bv spokesmen for the FDA about the propriety mhis Im­ indicted by a federal grand jury. I NESTLE records on the fund's loss of millions tion was not forthcoming.” Celubratlng 100 years pluting the artificial heart without prior FDA ap- VANITY FAIR ! This was perceived as a gesture of Washington Merry-(^o>Round TODDLER of dollars in dubious loans. The trustees' withheld some ol community sarvlo# LAND D’UUCES LUNCHEON ! I CHOC. MORSELS appreciation, for the only support ***^Miik the siHialledcentUct with FDA gmdeilnes has I 6 OZ. Instead, the department brass requested records, offered Founded O ct l , 1881 BUTTER Reagan got from a major labor un­ been played out of proportion,” Cooley said Sunday. NAPKINS ! ordered its Special InvestlgaUve documents that were not authen­ 1 LB. QUAfrrns 12 COUNT ion in the I960 elecUon. rtOO COUNT I Staff to ask the pension fund' Publishsd by the Manchetlsr But before he gete too cozy with ticated Cir obtained under dbth, and/ managers for documents under a Publlthine Cio„ Herald Suutra,''’ i 8 0 < , the Teamsters brass, the president finally "made it a formal policy not Qet the inside story report, and it is devastating. It voluntary agremnent.. Needless to Menobiewr. Com . OSOW. Telepbone • 1 .9 9 l< I might be well advised to read a Teamsters bosses manipulated to Uirn over any records” at all, the (20S) 643-2711, Jack Anderson tolls the inside story In “ Washington I VAUO AUU.4 TO A u a a I makes painfully clear that the Labor say, the Teamsters numagers were subcommittee reports. VALID AUQA TO AUto a | secret report on the union by the Carter’s labor secretary, Ray Merry-Go-Round” — every day oh the opinion page of _ VAUD AUOft t o 'AIM. a ______i Department' under Marshall delighted to agree. The agreement Member e( Unaed Prew Inter- I HIOH^^FAMUR^ S m t e Permanent Investigations Marshall, and other officials to The Herald. .s , I HIQHLA^ PARK J destroyed the effectiveness of its left tiiem free to engage in* the Despite the*uhion bosses’ refusal neUonal and Audit Bureau of Olr- j HI^LANO PARK Subcominittce. He could ‘spare his cover up evidence of either political oulaUons. < own investigation into the obstructive, foot-dragging to cooperate — and the Carter ad­ ad^itniatration the kind of em­ chicanery or gross incompetence in Teaiqsters Central States Pension techniques that have become a ministration’s strange refusal to To submit ciub notices barrassment the Carter White the government's investigation of force such cooperation— the Labor Fund. pattern in the penilon fund’s bard M. DIamand, Publiabar >To publicize your club meeting announcement, con­ House suffered from its strange Teamsters’ corruption. ' Department sleuths'were able to un­ Oen rata. Bdew>i Teamsters officials have com­ dealings with government in­ tact Betty Ryder at The Herald, telephone 843-2711 relatioQ* with the Teamsters. My associate Clark MoUenhoff cover widespread abuse in the Alan eiraSI, CHy Bdbof • lllllllllliw piled a notorious record over the vestigators. l i i i f T M bipartisan report shows how has a copy o f the subcommittee’s A U l l „5 THE HERALD, Mon., Aiu. 3. 1981 - 9 g - THE HERALD. Mon., Aug. S. 1961 fill Clerc advances O h itiM rie s Into final round Page 10 Mra. Wanda J..Hytzko savings banks Mrs. Wanda J. Hyszko of 23 CMway St., died Sonday at HarUord iW By Hilary Rosenberg federal lodge ruled that the com­ Hospital. She was the wife of the Hwald Reporter mittee iU e^ y approved the Rev. Waiter A. Hyszko, pastor of St. certifleates by violating a law that John's Polish National Catholic People crowded the -IqWies of allows thrift instituUons to pay .25, rhiirrh Muchester banks this molning to percent more In interest than com­ Bom in Wallingford, she had been take advantage of high Intttest mercial banks. a resident of Manchester for 22 rates on “snudl-saver” certificates The judge was ruling on a ca se’ years. Prior to retiring, she had that could change tornwrow. seems likely brought by the United SUtes League been employed as a private “Our lobby has been full aU mor­ of Savings Associations, the secretary for the Connecticut State ning,” said Raymond Juleson, vice organization of savings, and loan ByMiksTully The AL requires only a majority da,” said Hovnes. “When the what’s best for the league. This that everybody gets a chance to “In my judgment, this shall pass. 'Public Health Department for 20 president-of Heritage Savings & associations. The game of baseball, the enduring UPl Sports Writer vote to plaoe the split season over meeting was called, everybody was thing must be discussed. You have voice their opinion.” years. She was a member of St. Loan Association. Juleson said he expects the ceiling to give sometimes.” The members of the Executive nature of the game itself, has John’s Polish National Catholic . New banking rules that became the top. The NL, which will require informed. It’s a shorter notice than will Inevitably be lifted. Although While major-league players con­ a three-^piarters vote, shapew up as a usual. Most people realize we’re ^ e NL vote is crucial since (fom- (founsel. Bob Lurie of San Fran­ always prevailed.” Church, the Ladies Society of the effective Saturday removed the the measure will increase the com­ tinued to get re-acquainted with per­ missioner Bowie Kuhn has stated he cisco, O’Malley and Dan Galbreath Kuhn said he hoped fans would not Blessed Sacrament, and a member celling of U percent on the SOHOonth much closer fight. going to have to discuss this thing.” petition for savings and loan forming their summer rituals, Lou HoyneS, NL coimsel, con­ wants both leagues playing under of Pittsburgh, examined the concept take out their frustrations for the of Temple Chapter, Order of the certificates, allowing the rate to be associations, he said. “We’re executives were moiling the issues the same format. He appears reluc­ of the split season, and tarnished season on the players. Eiastem Star, in Manchester. set by the current index of Treasury firmed the existence of a technicali­ adjusting to competing in an uncon­ left by the 4 9 -^ strike. ty that could prevent the matter tant to institute the split season if recommended it. O’Malley said Sun­ “Well, there's bound to be vocal Besides her husband, she leaves securities. trolled market.” The blggUst question appeared to one league objects. day he expects the split season to expression,” said Kuhn. “We’d be two brothers, Gabriel ^ r i n s k i and But people must hurry to be sure from even reaching the floor. But he be whether the leaguesVonId iufopt said to doubted sny club would in­ NL vote One veteran club official said a pass. naive to think otherwise. I think I George Cyprinski, both of of obfadning the new 15.5 percent the qilit season Option left in the discussion last week in New York The players are also expected to understand more deeply than Wallingford; and three sisters, Mrs. rate for savings institutions and 14.9 voke it, and other league executives agremeint. agreed. produced “three or four firm ratify the agreement early this anyone how deeply disappointed Isabel Dobrowski and Mrs. Marie percent rate for certificates issued Company crucial The National League vote seems Under NL rules, clubs must ‘Yeses,’ two very.strong ‘Nos,’ a week. The Executive Board of the they must be in the loss of the last Bruback, both of Wallingford, and by commercial banks, The interest too close to hall Oabe Paul, receive “proper notice” on the ‘maybe’ toward the no side and two Players Association voted in two months. Mrs. Celia Symolon of Meriden. rata on nnall-sayer certificates are President of the Cleveland Indians, Chicago Saturday to recommend “But I hope they understand that Last-chance negotiations to avert a strike by agenda. In the absence of such more riding the fence.” The official The funeral Is Tuesday at 8:15 Transportation Secretary Drew Lewis arrives set every two weeks, and the cleared in said the American League might did not account for the remaining ratification of the agreement to the this was a tough time (for both a.m. from the Holmes Funeral air traffic controllers broke off early today, current two-week period-ends today. notice, 10 days, the body needs the at the Federal Mediation and Conciliation wind up closer than expected. unanimous consent to bring a votes. rank-and-file. Even in the fan- sides). Everyone was trying to do Home, 400 Main St., with a mass at 9 setting the stage for a 7 a.m. walkout. Robert Since the ceiling was lifted Satur­ Service office Sunday to ask air traffic con­ “I don’t think it’s that cut and matter to the floor. Hieoretically, National League President Chub tasyland of Cooperstown, N.Y., the right thing. It was a bitter a.m. at St. John’s Polish National day, the rates could change Poll, president of the controllers’ union, an­ complaint dried,” Paul said when asked if the one club could defeat the concept by Peter O’Malley, president of the Feeney, who will chair the meeting home of the Hall of Fame, fight.” Catholic Church. Mass will be trollers for a seven-day extension of their tomorrow. According to Juleson, the nounces the breakdown of talks. (UPl photo) league would easily adopt the plan. refusing consent to discuss the in (Siicago, is termed by a source to baseball’s problems intruded at the Inducted into, the writers' wing celebrated by the Rev. Thomas strike deadline. He was turned down. (UPl rate is expected to drop slightly. , agreed. A resident living behind Multi- “Our position is to go and see what matter. be “basically” against the split Induction of former St. Louis Car­ were , sports editor Gnat, bishop of the Eastern District, photo) > But still it will be h i ^ r than the “I can’t say for sure no one will in­ Circuits Inc.’s Harrison Street plant the clubs are saying; hear the pros season. Feeney met Saturday mor­ dinal right-hander , and columnist for UPl, and Joe assisted by Monsignor John Urban former 12 percent limit, he said. For . ’*1 really don’t think there will be voke it,” O’Malley said. “But in the Reichler, former sports writer for last week complained to police that and cons.” anyone u^ ,w ill object to the agen­ past, we have always tried to do ning with American League Presi­ Negro League Pioneer and the Rev. Wayno Kargul., people who have been .buying cer­ dent Lee MacPhail. and famed slugger . the Associated Press. Also honored Burial will be in St. John’s tificates at 13 percent or less, he cars in the company’s parking lot was broadcaster Er­ were playing loud music. The votes will take place Tuesday Kuhn and Jack Buck, the St. Louis cemetery. Friends may call at the said, “It’s kind of an exciting rate.” 'in Chicago. After the expected broadcaster who introduced nie Harwell. funeral home tonight from 1 to 9. At the Savings Bank of Police said they investigated the Kuhn said ticket sales around the Air controllers defy Friday m ^ in g complaint but found ratification of the agreement members of the Hall, both received Manchester this morning, bank league have been good — particular­ nothi^. reached early Friday to send the a smattering of boos from the glanloy J. Paszek president William H. Johnson players back to the stadiums, the assembled crowd. Buck responded ly in Detroit — but bad in one or two WEST HARTFORD - Stanley J. observed, “The lobby has got a Numerous residents in the area other cities like Atlanta. have complained of noise and odor owners will vote on the split season. by saying, “Come on, that's not Paszek, 64, of West Hartford, hus­ serpentine line all around it.” But, It will be new territory. what you came for,” and Kuhn In Milwaukee, fans seem to have band of Viola (Bialicki) Paszek, he aMedi the bank.is also handling pollution from the printed circuit forgiven any culprits. About 800 per­ board manufacturer. The latest “ We may have to invent some preferred to stress the positive died Friday at Hartford Hospital. back-to-work order many customers wh& are cashing or aspects of the day. sons rushed to the box office during parliamentary procedure,” said He was the brother of Veronica depositing Social Security checks complaint was made by James the weekend to cash in canceled Desautels, 43, of 19 HoU St. Hoynes. “Baseball is best exemplified by Paszek of Manchester. today. A1 Rosen, president and general its greats and their marvelous ac­ home game tickets and get tickets Funeral services will be Tuesday Unlike the savings banks, The Holl Street -Residents’ for future games, making it the Association has been trying to pre­ manager of the Houston Astros, complishments,” the Com­ at 8:15 a.m. from Richard W. continue the strike. Manchester State Bank, a commer­ busiest day for the ticket office Continurd from page I PATCO, seeking a 32-hour work vent the town from allowing Multi- added, “There are extenuating cir­ missioner. “These memories ul­ Sheehan Funeral Home, 1084 New “Confusion is going to reign here cial bank, has experienced no rush since the baseball strike began June week, better retirement benefits -Circiiits to expand. The company cumstances. One third of the season timately will outlast the nightmare Britain Ave., West Hartford, with a until things get sorted out,” said the of people to-buy the cehificates. 12. FAA facilities. and a $10,000 raise that would put wants to buy the Park and Cemetery has been lost. The Important thing is we have endured this summer. mass of Christian Burial at 9 a.m. at “I am ready to go to jail,” said top controller pay at about $59,000 'County aviation director at Manchester. State Bank has fewer . the Church of St. Brigld, West Hart­ savings customers than the savings Department garage. The purchase Steve Wallaert, president of Nor­ annually, rejected the government’s Pittsburgh. would allow it to increase produc­ ford. “The other airlines are just taking banks, vice president Stanley J. Jar­ folk, Va„ PATCO Local 291. last contract offer of a $50 million tion at the plant. Burial will be in Fairview a chance. They’re taxiing on out, vis explain^.- He said he expects PATCO said using “unqualified package and negotiations broke off Residents say the expansion will Cemetery, Soldiers Field. Calling and if they get clearance to go, more of the bank’s customers will military personnel” as “strike­ at ab

. I r THE HERALD. Mon., Aug. 3, 1861 - 11 10 - THE HEHALD. Mob.. Am . I. IWl f Legion nine in zone finals

PGA win famine By Lnn Auater. tast inning. 6oaldi Mike Liappes to caU upon the it. I should have gone out there and HickM made it 10(-9 in the top of game,” sighed Liappes, “They Herald Sportowriter “Somehow, soma way w t win. We told him what to throw.” the seventh with a mammoth deserved to win it, jind if we won we don’t quit, we don’t lie down. “Bobby (Piccin) is in a good grove homer, his second four-bagger, over deserved to win it.” powerful finish. It wks vefy Somdxnr, some way, the Job gets Somehow we come th ro n g . (But) and he’s hit something like four or^ the left centerfield fence. It was TORONTO (UPl) — The tan With Oosteihuis himself had a boMp ef done. That’s the way It’s been most about a 396foot shot. Ekl Fournier Mikoleit, in relief, gained the win 16 to make the total lost strokes 14 satis^ing. ” said OosterhuU, whose like 1 told the kids, this was oin^ the five home runs this weM,” Holik the broken glasses and the gro^nf round included four birdies snd of the season and that’s the way it first win of three (we need) and noted. lashed a one-out single to right and while Hickey, who hurled six innings eight golfers — who may still be for all nine players in three boles. in a Friday 24 loss to Locks, ab­ three bogeys. was yesterday as Manchester . Windsor Locks didn’t come in first -Somehow, some Manchester added an important continued to second as the ball looking for the 13 strokes mey lodt— Hta second shot at the par4 18th Legion baseball team rallied, and skipped,past rigbtfielder Eric sorbed the loss. would have gone dangerously far Nicklaus, who designed the by lying down.” run, one that proved to be the game- all gave until it hurt on bdialf, of course, had harshly criticUeg its then held on, for a 104 win ardt- Manchester, as has been its winner, in the sixth. Alex Britnell Stepper. ^ from the bole had It not smacked a “We hit, play good defense and Peter Oosterhuis in the final thice state of prepartion all week. rtval Bast Hartford in Zone E M t trademark during the year, saw a way we win’ sliced a double inside the first base' Fournier moved to third on a holes of tlw Canadian Open. fan, c ra c l^ his glasses. playoff action at Eagle Field. LaPenta loft to deep right but was just don't quit," Holik assessed. HU thitd Mot at 18 was not much “It stinks,*’ he said. big early brad dissolve. It had a 61 bag and took third on Joe Panaro’s The affable Oosterhuis accepted ’Ihe victory advances Post 102 to left stranded as Pandiscia grounded Manchester and Locks split during more ambitious. It landed in the But Glen Abbey snapped back at margin after three tamings but a sacrifice. He scored as a 14 Hickey these gifts, though they were the Zone b ^ two-of-three. cham­ out to third baseman Sean O'Leary, the season. Locks took a 6-5 deci-., ‘i ■ ^ V bunker, but that U where he at last its illustrious designer. two-run Mark Tapio homer in the offering to Mikoleit was high and in­ f offered umrillingly. They helped pionship round against regular fourth drew Bast Hartford closer side and ticked off catcher Greg who made a fine play to his left for Sion, Manchester a 3-1 duke and the decided that if some one had to win, HU sOcood Shot at the p ar4 15th clubs deadlocked, 7-7, in their final him win his first PGA duunpionshlp season winner Windsor Locks. That with the visitors going in front in the flame-throwing Hickey. The bard­ LaPenta’s glove and flew to the the final out. then it might as well be him. stalled about an inch from the cUp meeting. after seven years of strugipe. and he took a bogey at the iTth, series begins Tuesday night at fifth with a five-run outburst. throwing UOonn-bound righthander backstop. “That was i-'-'i'-li'-vahlp Oosterhuis, a dominant power on He M ip ^ out of the bnidter to Lodn’ Southwest Park at 8:tt. The within one foot to save par for 280 wliere he landed in the bunker. "I Jim Neary’s cheek awing two-run reraonded by striking out Mike the British circuit who became clubs are pdred Wednesday evening total, then watched as Nicklaus, two am happy for Peter (OosterhuU). double inside the rightfield foul Falkowski — but then, made a mls- an also-ran on the PGA, won the He dominated the British tour then at Eagle Field and, if necessary. a stripe fiwi if* after rdiever Rick tiAe on an 6-9 offering to Bob Piccln. $340,000 tournament by one stroke groups behind, missed by inches his ‘•-'F ^y -'y'' bid for a 90-foot eagle at 18 that camp over here and waitad seven third and deciding contest Thursday Mikoleit intentionally walked Kevin The no-ball, 6strike fastball was Sunday with a 1-under 70, in a traf­ years to win,” said NicktadI, whose night at Southw^ Park. Hickey. Bast Hartford then moved over the plate waist -high and the Playoff nexf for MB's fic Jam finish that had nine players se c ^ -p ta c e Check was $31,733. The- playoff * f bhamplon d im i earns the in front as Dan Pandisicia drew a hard-hitting hlanchester catcher unwittingly backing toward the •,A«j The 16th and 17th holes saw a run trip to Middletown (or state tourna- tweout boseeloaded walk and an turned it around and deposited it winners circle. m i i of bogeys. „ . ment play. additional ran was lUcked up as over the centerfield fence for a Closing out the regular, season, evening with Moriarty's facing Ver­ T.J. Calabrese each had two hits for After 15 holes, the last -three Hayes, looking for hU first victory Bast Hartford, defending champ, Rlikoleit wild pitdied Neaiy home. three-run homer and the lead. Etatstern Division champs Moriarty non at St. Thomas Seminary at 5:30 Herb's, which finished out of the groups — the b ig ^ st names in golf *What a bows out a t 124-9 bi Zone play. The locals,' however, were not while East Hartford opposes Society playoff picture at 11-144. among them—were all within three in- four years, dwble bogeyed at 18; Uappes took the blame for the Bros, whipped Herb’s Sports Shop, Kite and Thompson each had two ”rm.'jdiaking,” was hlancbester done. Ekric Stepper and Brad Cabral offering. “I wanted a waste pitch 62, in Twilight Basebali League at Trinity College Field, also at 5:30. The Gas Housers broke on top ear­ stndees of the lead. way to win’ straight bogeys; Nicklaus, Purtier, Coach Jack Holik’s first comment, drew oneHMit walks in the home fifth ■ then but didn’t get it. He (Hickey) play yesterday at St.- Thomas The two losers and two winners are ly with six runs in the first inning on Oosterhuis and Oklahoman Mark Lietzke and Graham all bogeyed 17; “I Just sUd a couple of prayeTs that and that prompted East Hartford went for the kill and the auv ripped then matched Wednesday. Play will six hits. Tony Mitta had two hits in Hayes were tied for the lead; Jack Seminary. The Gas Housers wound up atop be double elimination until an the frame. He scored on a Jim Silva Nicklaus, Andy North, Bruce and North bogeyed 16. Graham finUhed with a 70,2under the division with an 18-4-3 mark, Eastern Division playoff winner is triple with the latter toeing home Lietzke and third-round leader for the tournament, and tied with good for 39 points. Society for decided and that winner will face plate ahead of Steve Chotiner's two- Leonard Thompson were within ohe. Hayes at 282. The $16,150 dieck Savings took runner-up honors at 16 the Western Division playoff winner run homer. Buddy Silva capped the Tom Kite and Tom Purtzer were would have forced a playoffi puMed Graham’s career earnings '61 and 31 points followed by E)ast for the Twilight championship in a big stanza with a bases-clearing two back, while David Graham was “I had an idea that Jack Nicklaus over the $1 million mark. Hartford 16161 and 29 points and best three-out-of-five series. safety. three off the pace. would make his eagle putt at 18.1 -Thcnnpm, the 34-year-old North the Vernon Orioles 12-11-2 and 26 Larry Phair scattered nine hits in Buddy Silva was 3-for-4 and Ray Jose-Luls Clerc lays Into backhander enroute to match In Volvo Tennis Tournament Sunday In The par-71, 7,060-yard Glenn was Just in a daze.” Carolinian who broke the course collecting the win over Herb’s. Gliha had two-hits to pace Moriar­ Abbey layout managed tn produce points. / 6-7, 6-6, 6-4 win over Ivan Lendl In semifinal North Conway, N.H. (UPl photo) Nicklaus had to settle for a three- record with a 62 Friday and Playoff action begins Tuesday Butch and Greg Ciccagiione and ty's 12-hit attack. the almost unthinkable. The way tie for second with North (89) managed a one-stroke edge going challengers squandered a combined auS Lietzke (70) at 381. It was hU into the final round, suffered, six total of 13 strokes with 11 bogeys and fifth runner-up finish in the Cana­ bogeys while carding only one birdie one double bogey in the final three dian event—the only major national to fall into a tlitee-way tie for slath holes. title not included in hU 68 tour wins. Juniors win one, lose one OosterhuU acknowledged the Glen place with lUnde Island pro Bob "What a way to win, after Elastwood and Kite at 283. ' Baffle of Argenfines watching those big names come in Abbey course was made Jerry Pate, Scott Hoch, Jim Manchester Junior Legion run single by Tom Parlante, RBI of base knocks. and mine still stay up there on the treadierona thU past week as a Thorpe and Purtzer were at gM. baseball team split a pair of con­ single by Doug Whitaker and RBI Manchester, now 24-11-4 overall, leader board,” said the 33-yearold result of greens ravaged by Leading money-winner T o n Watson tests in the Bristol Invitational double by Paul Mador. returns to the diamond Tuesday (W erhuis, who Won 19 international bacterial infection. was e l^ t strokes of f the pace at 188, Tournament last weekend at Greg 'Turner had two hits to lead night against Herb’s Sports Shop for events before Joining the PGA tour “I am fortunate that the course U after a final round 72. Bristol’s Page Park. The locals ■ the way. the JC-Courant League Senior Divi­ lisfs Clerc and Vilas in 1974. ' so tough. It allows no one to make a opened play in the double elimina­ Wallingford scored seven times in sion championship at Wethersfield tion tourney Saturday morning with the bottom of the seventh and final High in a 5:30 start. a 64 win over Torrington Babe Ruth inning to register the come-from- Manchester's next start in the Bristol tourney is Sunday night at 8 in two of their last three meetings. The Clerc-Lendl match confirmed All-Stars and yesterday fell, 11-10, to behind win over the Juniors. NORTH CONWAY, N.H. (U P D - Brian McAuley hurled effectively o’clock at Muzzy’Field against host The battle of the Argentines Clerc, a curly-haired righthander, that. It was characterized by consis­ Wallingford Babe Ruth All-Stars. advanced to the finals by upsetting tent, hard, baseline shots by both Slow play warning C ^ s Petersen hurled a complete for 4V5 innings. Manchester had 15 Bristol, which was relegated to the resumes today. hits with Petersen, Bill Masse and loser’s bracket in a 74 loss to Third-seed Jose-Luis Clerc, who ^second-seeded Ivan Lendl, 6-7 <2-7), players. game victory Saturday, hurting a 6-4, 6-4, in a spectacular semifinal But Clerc’s deadly accurate ser­ Uiree-hitter. He struckout three. Ken Krajewski lashing three apiece. Meriden Intermediate. The has won 18 consecutives matches, Manchester-Bristol loser will be match Sunday. Vilas defeated vice made the difference. Clerc Manchester iced the win with a four- Turner added two hits and four RBI will face fourth-seeded Guillermo while Glenn DuBois also had a pair eliminated. Vilas in the finals of a $200,000 tennis eighth-seeded Eliot Teltscher of the served 22 aces, including three in a run fifth inning hightighted bv a two- tournament at Mount Washington United States, 7-6 (7-1), 6-1, to gain a row to clinch the second set. In both berth in the finals. the second and third sets, the score plays major role Valley. The tournament is sponsored by Clerc, who complained his hectic reached 4-4 until Clerc was able to Buffalo Wafer Tavern fhird best in fourney Volvo. three weeks in the United States left break in the ninth game. He v/eat on Just one week ago, Clerc downed him tired, said he would have to win both sets. tops on the LPGA circuit. Caponi is need the rest.” preferred to play Teltscher rather Clerc conceded his serving was DANVERS, Mass. (UPl) The Jamie's Angels sent Tavern to the Vilas in straight sets in the finals of warning came early in the round and - idso Just $17,5000 short .of Joining Joanne earner,' play Ins Third place honors were secured Jam ie’s Angels of Worcester, than Vilas, considered one of the the best he could remember. sidelines for good by posting a 2-1 the Washington Star tournament in tlie response by the co-leaderS K a l^ Whitworth as the ,oiw two Caponi and Stmhensoif, L _ by Buffalo Water Tavern women’s Mass, handed BWT its first loss, 61. Washington, D.C. Prior to that, world's great clay courters. “Maybe it's the altitude,” be said, miUiiMiHdbllar winners ht UFOA >^1hiid at 983i softball team at the ninth annual The Tavern collected only six hits, win in eight innings. Powers and But Vilas predicted Clerc would when asked what he had done to paints a vivid picture of why DonnS Birdsey each had two hits for the Clerc captured the U.S. Pro in Caponi won rad Jah Stephenson history. ■ ^ of $10,500 nioved her to withinJlS,- Spindle City Classic last weekend in two by Startup. Brookline, Mass. The 22-year-old make the finals. perfect his serve. “B c ^ the leading money winner 000 of cracking the million dollar Fatl River, Mass. Advancing in the loser's bracket, Tavern. “He (Clerc) was playing the best Vilas said he had trouble respon­ didn’t. McAdam was lO-for-20 and Clerc, now ranked fifth in the world, The two were tied for tbe-lead of a is my goal,” C ap^ said. “That barrier. Bwbara^MoxneSs was alone BWT posted a 62 mark in th e dou­ BWT w h ip ;^ Notre Dame Hospital has lost to Vilas in seven of their in the last three weeks,” said Vilas, ding to Teltscher’s game In the first would be a great thrill. But I know I in fourth at 284 while five playefs ble elimination tourney which at­ of Central Falls, R.I., 163. McAdam Birdsey 6for-22 to pace BWT in the who said he and (Here were friends. set. "He was playing completely $150,000 LPGA tournammt with 14 tourney. nine previous meetings. But Vilas, a holes to play Sunday when an of­ can’t play every wedc because I do were at 297. ; tracted 22 teams. had four hits and Sharyn Young, 28-year-old fixture of the Vilas, ranked seventh in the world, differently from Uie last Ume we BWT in its opener turned back Powers, Kilgore and Birdsey two Next action for Tavern is this said Clerc was already one of the played,” said Vilas. ficial told them they Were 91 weekend in the state tournarqent in professional circuit, has been minutes out of position and bad best Ocean State champ Rue, 63, behind apiece in a 16hit attack. world’s best players. Jean McAdam’s six-hitter. Cindy BWT then took on arch rival New Haven. eclipsed by his younger countryinan speed up play . Birdsey bad two hits to lead the at­ Redwood Saloon of New Bedford, Stephenson was so affected by the Mass., and came away with an warning she didn’teven take a prac- tack. exciting eight inning 14 verdict. Glicksfein nef winner ‘ tloe svdng, promptly drove into a Tavern whipped FJorio’s Austin happy 19th hok Restaurant of Warwick, R.I., 61, in Young’s sacrifice fly plated Betsy Upset win sand trap and took a bogey. Caponi Gilmartin with the game-winner. shrugged off the warning, birdied . ^ Cosmos In control of ball its next outing. Barbara Startup the hole and went on to post a lop- fired a six-bUter while Lee Lague Startup hurled a six-hitter for the MAGGIE VALLEY, N.C. (U P D - with victory sided 6-stroke victory, largest this Ward Holmes-Jim Kidney 69, Ibm bad three bits including a two-run win. Former New Zealand Olympic Country Club Rick bfvls (17) and Ivan Buljan of the New York Giants’ Stadium In East Rutherford, N.J. homer and Cheryl Powers, Bonnie runner Rod Dixon upset defending Age took its toll year on the LPGA h ra . Wall-Serge Sartori 70; Bad; nine Cosmoa edge Jacksonville's Jean Pierre out of Jacksonville won, 2-1. (UPI photo) SAN DIEGO (UPI) T- Tracy “I thought it wap really poor SWEEPS- A -Gross -Brad —Art Rimdoux-Brian Robidean 27, Kilgore and McAdam added two hits champion Herb Lindsay and world Austin says her victory over Pam timing, 1 was so mad he did that,” Downey 72, Net —TOm Zemke 77-8- John Ca^anello-Paul Correnti 28, control pf ball during midfield action Sunday a( each. Possible start cross country champion Craig Shriver in a tough final match of a said St^henson, who triple-bogeyed 69, Bob Behling 76-749, Rich Joe Macaione-Bill Masse 29. 1 HOUSTON (UPI) There is a Virgin to win the 6mile Moonlight in Stockton loss $125,000 tournament was good for A m rcham bault 76-7-69, E rw in possibility J.R. Richard, who was Road Race in record time Saturday her confidence and a step on the Kennedy 73449; B -Gross —Stan LADIES MEMBER-GUEST- Grosk Decision awaited felled by a life-threatening stroke a night. road to recovery from a back injury. Markowskl 79, Bill Sullivan 79, Net —Crista Seddon-Jeanette Campbell Victory .worth $38,805 LOS ANGELES (UPI) - The fate year ago, may pitch this week in the Julie Shea, the Atlantic Coast Austin, the No. 1 seed, aveng^ —Rick DeNicolo 78-13-65, Sal 80, Linda Kaye-Marcie Masley 82, of the Oakland Raiders’ proposed Houston Astros’ exhibition game Conference female Athlete of the SOUTH ORANGE, N.J. (UPI) - Spain. her Wimbledon defeat at the hands Evangelista 83-13-70, C —Gross Net —Joanne Hunt-Dorhbn move to Los Angeles is in the hands against the Texas Rangers. Year the last two years, won the The wily veteran seemingly had the ' Stockton gained the final with of Shriver, seeded No. 2, with a 6-2, It was really —Merrill Anderson 88, Net—Charlie Manchester 61, Cora Andersbn- of 10 people who know or care little “J.R. will throw batting practice women's division, defeating her match in hand, but in the end he triumphs over Butch Seewagen of 5-7, 6-2 victory Sunday at Rancho Whelan 95-24-71. Kathy Dimiow 62, Doris WoOd- about professional football. Monday night. If we feel he is far younger sister Mary Shea, the night couldn’t get away from the fact that New York, Sammy Giarnmalva of Bernardo. FATHER-SON/DAUCHTER- Broniage 63, Lynn Prior-Elsie Gtrat Bouchard credits The seven-woman, three-man enough along, we might give him a race's defending champion. he is, indeed, a veteran. Houston,' Jimmy Arias of Grand The tournament was sponsored by poor timing’ Gross —Bob-Bob Reynolds 75, Jim- 65, Agnes Romayko-Betty Dziadus federal court jury was to resume chance against the Rangers,” said Throughout the race, Julie Shea Dick Stockton, once ranked Island, N.Y., and Nick Saviano of Wells Fargo Bank. Jobn Herdic 76, Net —Walt-Ron. 65, Marion Zamaitis-Tina deliberations Monday in the an- Houston Astros manager Bill Vir- thought she was following Patti among the world's top 10 tennis Plantation, I^ . “I never lost concentration out Ferguson 70, Nondo-Lon AnnuUi 71, SUkotowsky 65. , - tips Yrom Baker titriist suit which pits the Oakland don. “We need pitchers. Lyons Catalano, runnerup in this The women’s final between there and that probably won the Dick-Kort Hassett 71, T.J. Tom “It's a possibility, but I’m not year’s Boston Marathon. She had players but now down to No. 201, led TWO BALL- Barbara Davis-Claire Browns impress Raiders and the Los Angeles Ruzici, who is ranked ninth in the match for me,” she said. “My Crockett 71, Ed-Bob Pagani 71, mistaken a long-haired male runner young Shlomo Glickstein 6-3, 5-7, 3-1 Zimmerman 59, Edna Wadas-Hilda (^Useum against the the National going to commit myself now,” he world, and Horvath, 32nd, lasted 75 biggest strength is my mental Father-D au^ter -G ro ss —Rudy- Bouchard said his father was By United Press International in front of her for Lyons. in the third set before his 30-year-old Kristof 61, Flo Barre-Rose TALLADEGA, Ala. (UPI) - Football League. said. toughness and although I don’t Nancy Plerro 86, Net —Marsh- watching the race from his legs finally gave way and Glickstein minutes. It was the first pro victory Cagianello 61, Cora Ahderson-Ida Rookie Ron Bouchard was the believe I was playing that well, I the next hole and never got closer Fitchburg, Mass., home but network Following Saturday’s Hall of rallied for a 6-4 final-set victory Sun­ for Horvath, who left the amateur Marsha Warren 73. McMahon 61. ' winner of the $294,000 Talladega 800 ranks early this year. managed to beat her with finesse.” than two shots the rest of the way. BEST 12* A —Dave Kozlovicb 42-4- technical problems knocked the pic­ Fame Game —' tbe traditional day in a $125,000 tournament at the PAR FOURS- A -Gross -Edna stock era race Sunday, but he said Horvath, hitting powerful ground “I look at this match as a tough “It really upset me, 1 was fluster^ 38, Ray Gordon 42-3-39, Dick Smith ture out late in the race. \ opener (or the pro football Orange Lawn Tennis (Hub. Hilinski 42, N et-E dna Wadas 44-12- all (he cradit goes to fellow driver Unknowns' strokes, fought off three break step on the road to recovery. I've the rest of the round. Here 1 am tied 42-349, Lon Annulli 43-3-40, Serge ”5^ father gets so excited, so I preseason schedole — Cleveland In the women's final, Kathleen 32, Flo Barre 46-1^3^B —Gross Buddy Bidcer. ReggiBsaus points in the opening game and then only been back now lor (our months for the lead and he tells us to speed Sartori 44-440, Terry Schilling 43-3- Bouchard, dlqiteying abilities un­ can’t imadne what it was like at Browns Coach Sam Rntigliano was Horvath of Largo, Fla., 15, upset —Rose Lamolt 50; Net —Rose eager to point out the difference top-seeded Virginia Ruzici of lost only three polnte in the next five from my back trouble and it was up or it’s two shots (penalty.) I think 40, L arry G assa 44-4-40, Bob common for a driver in bis first year home,” Rouchard said. "Dad standouts games to close out the set in 26 good for me to have u tough nutch,” it’s a lack of eqierience.” Reynolds 43440; B —Ted Stepanski RobMeau 51-1447, Mary Collins 8^ strated beating On the televisioo and between 1 ^ year’s start and this • Romania 6-0, 6-4. 15-37; C—Gross—Eileen PlqdsikgS, on the NASCAR' circuit, passed ; • .The tournament was known as the minutes. Austin said. “I’ll pUy in Toronto The official; Ken Sojka,' said the . 45- 7-38, Ben Delmastro 43448, Gus veteran Darrell Waltrip with 400 ftaMy he Justmraw it on file floor.” year’s. > SANTA CLARA, CaUf. (the Canadian Open) in a couple of Anderson 47-7-40, Orlando Annulli Net -Sylvia Stecholts »1640, Wutrip said be and Labonte were Tlut was understandable, since (UPI) — For the real ‘Mutual Benefit Life Open, and it is LPGA rules were clear on slow Claire Zimmerman 64-20-44. yards to go to win the 13tb annual tbe Browns opened their 1980 exhibi­ weeks. That will be the final war­ play. He said normally a group is 46- 5-40, Pete Foster 454-40, Charlie locked into a two-car finish sports fan, the name of the oh the Volvo Grand Prix circuit. “I summer classic by two feet. ’’Baddly tion sdiednle with a 464 loss, and started getting cramps in my legs In mup before the U.S. Open the first warned after it leaves the green, but O’Rrilly 48-741, Did; Hassett 48-7- Baker was super. He helped me out “conqplet^ forgetting about old game is competition. this time they looked impressive the last few games and Shlomo Softball week in September. the large crowds necessitated the «, mu 0gden_464-^, Frad T ^ TallwQod i the last coupla days,.’.’. said Ron Boodiard. Measured by that “I expected a tou(^ matdi and I warning to be on Jtbe tee. 47- 641, John Wilson 47441, ’’Where did he' come from with a 2610 victory over the Atlanta yanistick, who is to say played smart by running me BoneWd. “If it wasn’t for tatan. 1 Falcons. It was aeveland’s first around,” Stockton said. “ I just ran got it. After you lose to someone like “When a group is out of position, Deyanney 46441, Paul Cornnti «8- TWOJMAN ARIZONA- Grops wouldn’t have won this race today. vayT” Waltrip asked. “When we Ju e^en Kolenda of West TONIGHT’S GAMES I lost to her at Wimbledon, it’s three abreast, there going for victory in a pre-aeason opener since out of gas at the end.” Dean vs.’CCongo, 6 — Keeney it’s our responsibility to warn 741, Brooks Allen 48-7-41. Mike —Phil Daly-John S h a ^ 88, G e o ^ He told me how to pass, where to Berlin, Steve Rajeff of San “I felt that I would-be finished if I always nice to come back and win. them,” Sojka explain^. ”It’s a Lomba 47441; C - J im O’Rourke McAlees-Herb Delasco 69, Lira pass and where to draft. He went out ) flag, I was doing all I conM do to 1960 ' Francisco, Tom Peterson VeU v». Oak St,, 6 — Nike keep out of Terry and along sneaks Rnti^iano tempered his glee by lost that game and dropped behind 4- It’s good for my confidence,” Austin pretty consistent application of the 48- 13-35, Art Robidoux 51-12-39,AngeU-Bili Muzin 69, IM —Charlie of his way to help me. of Tacoma, Wash., Kathy Johnson’s vs. Social Club, 7 130 — said. “I tried to keep everything to Bouchard. saying, “We need to get a little Ir” said Glickstein, 23, who is Nike (LPGA) rules.” , Herm Dvorak 48-9-39, Hank Murphy Romanowski-Ken Scofield 754441, “ WinaM a Grand Nafional race Arendsen of Holland, ■BndGiBarancel mmauiG mandLecaE her backhand as much as possible so Caponi paid little heed to the war­ Dick Young-Dick McMulUn 761545, more artistic. We had self-control Mich., and Ana-Marie rdnked No. 50 in the world. “Dick HPMarkel vs. Frr’s, 6 — 53-1340, Bill Hornra 56-1640, BUI la the greatest feeling. I can’t end was plraaod, but we had «qipor- she couldn’t hurt me, kty serve is ning, spring it mainly came about Itoavey 50-1640, Low gross —Ward Blaine Hareld-Lou Gonsales 56, "Main this was one hdl of a 1 Rouclion of Paris aren’t Renault 18I was tiring in the final games and I Fitzgerald bdieve yet that I won the race. riC6s" was able to move him around.” definitely improving. I (eel more because she had three-puttod 0w Holmes 72, R ra Gordon 72. John Boylan-Nelson Eddy 56. BIU Tomorrow I'll prabably be able to tamitles we didn’t take.” tbe equal of Reggie Ilembrowski's vs. Luigi’s, 7i30 — BoiKliBrd alM canght Laboi^ devMaiid rolled iqi 206 yards m Glickstein won his first Grand confident vdth it. It conies with a lot first and third greens. But she found SWfEEPS-A-Gross-Ward Holmes Dowd-Didt Vizard 56, Don CMvey- Jackson, Earl Campbell or Fitzgerald tell you better bow 1 fed,” fiifpfiM* of bard work.” her touch, making the first of her ta. Net —Dave Kozlovicb 73-846, George ftankenberger 56, Ken Bouobsrd, starting from the 10th tha grM d, behied mightily by sub- Tom Watson. Everyone Prix event since January, 1980. PAM vs. Irish, 6 — Robertson “I gness this is what yon might stithta fnllbaa (fieo Miller (11 Stockton, from Sawgrass, Fla., Shriver, who' admits she can be five Mrdies when she rolled in a six- WiUle Oleksinaki 74-747, Lon An­ Anderson-Frank Sullivan 5$, Ron- position in a Bulek, overtook has heard of Jackson, Flo’s vs. f^herrone, 7 i3 0 — r a f i a t o ^ break,” said M b o ^ carries for OPyarda) and little-used failed to cash in on four break points hurt by close calls that don’t go her footer. num 7 4 ^ Rick Long 76668, B RoyBroeae57. Waltrip and Terry, Labonte Just (kutapbell and Wataon, but Robertson way, got a few Sunday. rtnM igbM l5bio Han (five carrlM Get the in the pivotal fourth game and Lathrop vs. Buffalo, 8i4S — “Except for the front pine today -4)nMS. -4ack Devanney 79, Net after tte last torn of the I804ap tnee. Kolehda, Rajeff, Peterson, “I M there were several doae 9WBEPS"t EAM BEST IS- Grass .VvnuShd'biiB fra t h ^ W lap. br$6«rads);A tlatt(a managed only Aieodten and Rouchon are prices of the Oliciutein, the No. 4 seed, showed Robertson (9over par 37) I playnd grant the ->Orlando Annulli 76-10-M, Ted V lnitling aroond he two.to take purrsQ and 1 Wsrs in bnny racing renewed vigor in the closing games. calls on cnidal points that should whole tournament,” Caponi m l ”1 Straanaki 81-1447. PaidCoifenti81- —Oaly-Sheetz SI, McAlae6Delhsoo 8$jnirde in 90 carrioe. known only among their Belliveau vs. Buekland, 6 — (be cheduM fhif - each other that he (Bouchard) Jdst Git the margin of victory was a year now on Glickstein, who earned a $15,000 Pagani have gone my way,” the 6-foot probably played better last wnek M ^ O ^ k a Allen 80-1847« C 53; Net —Romanowski-Scofiekl 86 W al^, winner of last wosk’s peers and the fans who teenager said. “One-particular call right by.” 'pair of eecond-half touchdown economical, first-place purse, broke back in the Tikey vs. BAJ, 6 — Charter Oak when I finished sixth in the Om . -G ro ss —John CagUinello 83, Net 24-35, Andrason-Sullivan 614547, Pocono 900 was aooond and Labonte follow such sports as fin was reversed after 1 won the point Tlie course was a little tougher -Jim O'Rbnrke 85-98-59, Oil Garvey-Frankenberger 6618-38, TlMg$9«nr4hi Boodiard, whose paasee bom backup quartraba^ swtanming, cutting, roller front-wheel sixth game with a backhand service was third. Polewittar Harry Gant host pranaua finish wps eighth, Wm McDonald to backup wide Renault Le Car : return that caught the line. REC when the umpire overridpd a today with the wind and-pin Stephens 862244, A1 Puzao 861646, Dan Gothers-Bob McNamara 8647- finiahed .fonrtb ahd Bobby AlUson, speed skating and softbaU. drive Renault 18I and Le car. linesman. That should lever placements.” Austin Weimra 861847, Charlie tt , Dowd-Vizard 6623-39. avenged 158.717 mph in a race that receiver Ridqr Feedier. • During the past U days Stockton, unseeded, committed four Reed Omstruction 12-1, MCC Vets Who M 108 laps before falling was awwed dght ttmfs by caution MonmizM, a (Oartb-round drab errors in the lOth game, with the ^ KV3, Nelson Freightway 0-4, Oak St. happen. No umpire should be Caponi held a fournMot lead.afler Wheira 91 9447, Bill Heavey 87-16 TWO MAN BEST BALLr Grass behind Cf en^ns nrablems, w m they were tne( stars of ThG Inventory’s good—the savings great so drive one allowed to ovmmle a linesman. I'get —Bob Ckdllhan-man Doiiiian 88, Jim . flags. chotce (ram Southern Cal in 1080. World Games I, a competi- hour, 16-minute final ending on a Packagd Store 5-6, Oariea Sales 5-8, nine boles, but it was out in half 68. fifth, liw five top drivers were in was Also Slpe’a backup last year and angry out there. Sometimes it Im^ Bldwell-Roy Bell 70, Norm Bbuchard’s victory earned him tiod In 16 non-Olympic and price one today. forehand volley into the net by the Postal Employees 4-9, West Side when she btweyed the lOth and MfiMBER-MEMBER- Net -S ta n Bnidu. $18486. Waltrip took home $a480 tha BtowHs wera conridered to have . American. Glickstein, a former Italian Kitdien 4-9, MMHCU-The me to get angiy and sometimes it StephMson bir&d the I9th. But Pradmtak-Jim O’Rourke 53, Brooks Daiganlbliarc S e b a ^ 70, Net—Ifin AltbCugh Bouchard found it hard sports which attracted 1,- goes the other way. This tithe It C s j ^ birdied the 13tb and Stephan- Alien-Dick kIcMahon 53. Brat Sledjeski-Ken Ja^ls 67, Gary for aecond plan. «zfc«p a h it dumca in not having an 400 athletea from 58 coun­ -pergeant in the Israeli army, won Main Pub 3-10. to believe he woo Sunday’s race, ho Mora than half the drivers in the experienced algnal-caller bSind the Maccabiah Games gold mwlal in went the other way.” Austin’s first son b o g ^ it, and Caponi finiahed Davls-Ray Goidoo 59, Ed Hayes-BUl Watters-mil Osternupn 57, M o said ho. had a "fwiny toaling we tt car fMd dropped out beennes of tries. > break came in the first, set on a bgU in a fiooiriah witb-birdies on IS, 17 Schaffer 59, Ben Delmaatro-Don Nixon-John Risso 89, Bpb SiM. With Us performance Satur­ hingles two weeks ago. His earlier- NIKE . were fotaig to ran weU. mechanical problems. The ' ^ day, McDonald may have allayed . Kolenda won four fin Turnpike TV 11-2, Waidiington that Shriver and many in the crowd and 18. She finished with a 71 for a Davis 60, Ron ReneurralTBlll Chambers-Jin) Aiifmaa 'SIL Sam ' IMI«0N.IMIete Foster Stone 60. ' ; ■ ' ___ “I h a t lom td over a f bar . Great Neck. N.Y.; Brad Drewett of NeU ^pdoett. and thetw o TUs. won three in speed skating. llm l^•leB|l/RlNm DfNiBrS ' Australia: and Manuel Orantes Of ty 44. Mota’a 3-10. winner. hra 1981 earntaigs to nearly $160,000, 67. John Wllks-Blll Tomkiel 69, and said. ’Maybe you’re right.’” THE HERALd , Mon.. Aug. 3, 1961 — 13 12 - THE HERALD. Mon., Aug. 8. 1961 L For 'S; .■■■ j ■fw

4 a very good summer Jack Nicklaus3I,739 70-70-70-71-ttt Central Marii Hayes 16,180 Chicago U I V. N n US David Graham 16,180 70- 72-70-70-88 Minnesota HU M « 17 U7 Jai Alai Results Tom Kite UX6 89-7248-74-89 Tulsa MM M « « m B ^ ^ s tw o ^ 13X6 89-71-7M7-S8 DalUa 531 n m n m B a s e b a l l Leonard Thmpsn 19X8 7342-7S*76-~2B Western Jerry Pate 10X0 70.74-7248-284 Bowling San Diego 1710 » « 44 136 Sun. matinee Scott Hoch 10X0 7949-71-7I-2M Los Angeles » U 41 46 37 125 Jim Thorpe 10X0 80^7^71•72-8l California • 1117 • « 41 XI taM sM H lM Tom Purtzer 10X0 71- 7040-76-2M r ______^ n Jose 916 » « M m taM tU tM M U n Hinkle8.09T. 8949-77-70-888 Northwest m n m i 1 n , iw iti) T iM sU itiH M J.C. Snead 7.680 72- 7^70•72-8B8 Vancouver 1710 » 17 51 L51 Rnh « 43 43 131 AMERICAN LEAGUE Tommy Aaron6X7 71-74-7349-38 Calgary 1513 IMnt lUI Ml 4M Tom Jenkins 6 60-7^7749-W Bowling Results / Seattle 1413 • 8 IX I t a s MM TH nltem tIM IM Ul East By United Press Intenutlonal <' every week or so.” And he said he W L Pet. GB Denis Watson 6 JW 71- 71-71-76-187 Portland 1315 8 44 X 1 8 I M i ' IlM I M Ml W By Barbara Richmond New York M S .697 George Archer 6X7 70- 75-71-71-387 CAIIMVilhVllKxlmonton 1017 AV af 51 « .4 3 1© M M a m W M . 4 Ita* M«M m m doesn't talk to them either — at Tom Watson 8,128 72- 79-71-73-38 x^cllnched dlvlihn title. WMl i-7 XTiH Herald Reporter Baltiinore 31 » !74 8 (Third______ilpinfalls) Nrtwb U tlM lI least not yet. Milwaukee 31 25 H4 3 Bruce Devlin8.ia 71-75-72-70-38 (Teanu get ilx poInU for wliming In htiMN 74 SHIM Mike S u lliv a n ^ . 71- 73-70-74-38 1. Tom Laskow, Commackv.H.Y..4iB9 reinilatlonllme or overtlma but only four IMMNM-IIHUI Albert J. Robinson of 229 Henry He added however, that he does Detroit 31 8 i44 SMi 2. Mike Durbin. Chagrin Falls. TiIMt 144 tIMUl Bo^on Lee Trevino 9.781 74-70-71-74-38 jn ln u lor winning a game d e d M by 8 8 ixSB 4 Bob Shearer 3,78 73- 7I-75-70-18 9X9 ibootout. A bonuf polntu awarded for Ml US XM St. has been told that snake plants have a plant that used to have C l^lan d » 24 5 8 5 Larry Nelson 3.78 7149-75-74-28 3. Guppy Troup, Jacksonville. Fla., each goal Bcored up lo a maximum Of i*tan IIM XM IN only blossom once in 100 years. He beautiful blossoms on it. He said the Toronto 16 e i76 19 m IM 4 ten IM IM Scott Simpson l7 8 72- 74-7548-28 3X1 • ' three per team per gafne exchiding l a can't tell whether one of his plants blossoms looked like porcelain but West Curtis Strange 9,78 70•76-7^7t-38 4. Joe Berardi, New York. 3M overtimei and ihootouti.) IhrpblflM I M t a l XM Oakland 37 23 .617 Joe Hager2|n 70- 74-72-74-28 5. Marshall Holnian. Medford. Ore.. Saturday'! Rexulti ' ' ll4t4IM WMa 44 MIM has dispelled that myth. it’s given up blooming. He said he’d Texas S3 S .68 IVt 3X6 Montreal S, Vancouver I ftilMbMMMI Chicago 31 32 585 BUI Caffee2X0 74- 73-73-71-28 tataNMtMUl In 1972 he had some blossoms on a like to talk to that one. Phil Hancock 2X0 86-77-75-70-38 6. David Ozio, Vidor. Texas, 3X4 Tampa Bay 1, Los Angeles r M M a W W U I . Titta444XIMIM California ' 31 » 517 6 Keith Fergus2X0 71- 71-76-70-28 7. Carmen Salvino, Chicago, Minnesota X, Edmonton 0 Ilkt couple of his snake plants and now He doesn't have any special in­ Kansas City 8 8 .48 12 8. Joseph Greco, Jacksonville, Fla., flMSrik! >4-' '' SeatOu* 21 » ! 8 14V% Johnny Miiler2X9 72- 73-74-71-38 Seattle I, Tulsa 0 '> SMtltapi IMS Ml US I h tta te h MM IIM iM he has some blossoms again. The terest in outside ga'rdening. He does Minnesota 17 8 JM 18 Tim Simpson2.181 74- 72-73-73-291 3X4 San Diegos, Calllomial INtinNIbm ill iM problem is, he doesn’t know if they have some rose bushes and some BobGilder2.181 71-72-75-79-391 9. Alan Granat. Pala8ide,Colo..3X? PortlandX, San Jose 1, shootout I tassra t e n s , XM XM Sunday. Aug. 9 10. Al Stonum, South San Francisco, IlM r In XM Ail-Star u m e at Cleveland. 8:90 p.m. Tim Norris 2.L81 75- 73-72-71-291 Sunday's Results M N lM tiU I 1 M t e n XM are on the same plant or a different plants that, come up every year. He George Bums2jl81 71- 7076-74-81 Calif, 3X5 Atlantal. Fort LauderdaleS tatasMITIM one. said he lets it go at that. Monday. Aug. 10 Vance Heafnerz.181 7071-73-77-81 11. Dave Husted, Milwaukie, Ore., 3,78 Washington X, Toront FwMsI-IttSJI Kansas City at Baltimore. 7:90 p.m. 12. Pete McCordIc, Houston, 3,78 rwM sM IlM M Bobby Watkins2,L81 7071-72-70-291 0 TifMa S-H 1471.71 Tfgicla 14 ,1 1 1 ^ He said he won’t let that happen Also, having good luck with her Milwaukee at Cleveland. 7:98 p.m. Artie McNickle2,LM 73- 71-72-75-291 15. Jay Robinson, Van Nuys, Calif., Calgary*, ChIcagoX talk again. He’s tagging the one that’s flowers this year is Mrs, Irene Bren­ Chicago at Boston, 7:98 p.m. Tommy Valentine2,181 7944-7076-391 3,791 ' MondayVjgaes Toromo at Detroit. 8 p.m. itaiNiltan MM MI'UI blossoming now. nan of Charter Oak St. Her Giant Gil Morgan 1,687 7071- 73-73-28 14. Ken Fernandez, Rogue River, Ore,, (0 Games SchedulM) ItaMmli 7M ill J'tataCwtem «l» Texas at New York. 8:08 p.m. Mike MorleylX? 72- 7649-75-28 3.78 uesday's Games ItawSnauM XM iM Oakland at Minnesota, 8:s> p.m. I M r M ln IM The blossoms are sort of a soft Royal Lilies are blooming profusely, Bill Kratzert 1X7 72- 71-72-77-28 L5. Glenn Pierce. Jacksonville, Fla., (AllalmesGDT) lUMten I XM beige and the plant in question is 12 much to her delight. California at battle, 10:98 p.m. DanPohllXt 74-7072-77—28 3,782 ' Loa Angeles at JackaonvIUe, 7 JNi.m. ' «MWi M MXM tm M u m M Tuesday. Aug. II Lyn Lott 1X4 76- 72-72-73-28 16. Kenny Hall, Albaiw, N.Y., 3,772 Fortauoerdale at Montreal, I p.m. tahihMHtUI M t t o r o m u t I or 13 years old. Robinson said that Meanwhile, over on Cooper Hill Milwaukee at Cleveland, 2,8:98 p.m. 17. Randy Lightfoot. St. Charles, Mo., TiftakH'IIMnM Kansas City at Baltimore. 7 ;90 p.m. Lee Elder 1X4 77- 71-74-71-28 Calgary at Seattle, I0;SD p.m. Titali744XLXIX«X most of the plants he has have been St., Mrs. Clifton Martin (and her Chicago at boston. 7:98 p.m. Gary Player 1 Xd 75-73-7075-293 3.768 fMk~ John CooxlXd 74- 71-75-73-28 18. (tie) Dave Frame. Baldwin Park. iiMm BN iM Uf RMtalc given as gifts for various special oc­ neighbors) are enjoying the sight Toronto at Detroit, 8 p.m. Calif., 3.761 T Mta Otels IIM IIM IW Texas at New York,8;08 p.m. Jim NelfordIXd 744078-73-29^ ItaN s iM iNi I L m m MM XM IIM casions, such as anniversaries and and smell of beautiful gardenias Rod Nuckolls 75- 72-75-71-28 18. (tie) Les Zikes, Palatine, III., S.Xl t b n ..Ml Oakland at Minnesota. 6;X p.m. Lou Graham l.()00 73- 74-74-73-291 70. Tom Nevitt, Jacksonville, Fla^S.TW HraatataaMt . **. Valentine’s Day. blossoming in her yard. California at Seattle. 10:X p.m. Dana Quigley 1,0(KI 74- 73-73-74-84 21. (He) Ted Iterrington, Crystal River, MWMMWM te te lT M M i He doesnt give the snake plants For Manchester gardeners — it's Fla.,3,7f4 A u t o ta iN b 4 -l» M NATIONAL LEAGUE Charles Coody 1.(0) 75- 71-74-74-294 taMsMIlliN any special care “just waters them been a very good summer. Mark McCumbcrl.CDO 72-75-73-74-294 21. (tie) Michael Miller, Albuquerque, TriMaM-tMMM - TifMa fl4SM IIM - East Dale Douglass 1,000 72-76-75-71-294 N.M,.3.754 R a c i n g ^ •He W L Pet GB Ed Dougherty 1,000 72-75-7071-294 X Joe Hutchinson, Scranton, Pa., 3,751 t Ms tea lUI iM XM Philadelphia 34 21 .618 >- Bob Proben 9T2 72-76-74-73-2Sf. 24. Danny Hamilton. Miami, 3.730 Ita s f " liM liN Ml St. Louis 30 20 .600 IV^ IMnmiNiaN . TM IM I Mm IM iM Morris Hatal.skyX! 71-73-7070-2Sf. IMnNalkm . XM Montreal 90 r. .848 4 Woo^ Blackburn 982 74- 74-75-73-295 StaMI i « Pittsburgh 28 23 .821 8V Jim MntOOO W M iM tB M . WMll4X4iM New Yorx 17 94 .393 18 72-72-78-74-28 ta M i 24 MUM Chicago 18 37 288 ITV^ EUldic Pearce 930 75- 71-74-76-28 ta M i XI XUXN Mick SoWm 71- 75-74-77-297 Trihcls 24-I XIXUI TriMaX14tXHJI ' West ■$mOt j Los Angeles 36 21 .632 - Mike Rcid9(r. 6078-78-73-297 ' /fm a m tW Mr m m m m Wayne Levi 908 72- 73-79-73"297 Auto Racing Reanlta ItaM Pteeitaa IM IN XM Cincinnati X 21 6X By United Pleat Intaonatioual IBRWm itXUHBI Houston 28 29 .491 8 Gary Hallberg 908 7072- 7079-297 ikahmanilMiwI 7M IN Jay Haas 879 74-74-76-73-28 NASCAR Talladega on ItasraUNsIkia IM Atlanta X 29 .463 Bill ^ndcr879 607076-75-28 Al Talladk^, Ala., Aug. X Jteil^awtolni MM liM lU San Francisco 27 32 .«8 10 John Mazza ff8 74-72-74-79-28 Soccer (Listed Siilh type of car, lapa completed MNaXitHM . Ita^krttMtaMS iM U San Diego 23 33 .411 12W Don Pooley 888 60707070-28 and winner'! avarage ipeed) taM iX 4$m M Sunday. Aug. 9 .. MX Lon Nielsen X8 74-74-7075-28 1. Ron Bouchard. Buick, Ml, IM.737 THMa X44 S4MII . t e U i » MIM All-Star Game at Cleveland. 8:X p.m. Curtis Sif ford 841 73- 75-77-76-303 mph Monday. Aug. 10 iD a n e tl Waltrlp. B nl^, IM taMsT4iUXM ' T- New York at Chicago. 2 :X p.m. Golf Results I tails M m MM MM iM TriMs 7-14 MUM By UnitedI Press International 3. Terry Labora, Bulek, US ItawiiUMwti IM iM Pittsburgh at Montreal. 7:» p.m. 4. Harry Gant, B iM , lA gtatanUMiiaitXMlJll St. Louis at Philadelphia. 7:3^ 915008 LPGA tournament 0 km ta il IM At Danvers. Mass.. Aug. 2 NOrt'TH AMERICAN SOCCER LEAGUE O.Bobby Alliaon, Bulek, UB Cincinnati at Ix)s Angeles, 8;X By United Press International 5. UkeSp^,«ulok,lR Atlanta at San Diego, 10 :X (Par-72) East 7. Kyle Petty, Bulek, U7 Houston at San Francisco. 10:X Donna Capon) 922 J0) 694848-71-276 W L GF GA BP PU. 8. Jody Ridley, Ford, U7 Tuesday,^Aug. II Jan Stephenson 14.78 7246-70-74-282 x-New York XI 6 IX « !i7 HI ». StenBarreU, Pontiac, U6 Jal Alai Entries Pittsburgh at Montreal, 7:X p.m. JoAnne Camer 10X0 70-7546-73-283 Montreal MIX K « « 1X0 10. Dave Mucla, Buic^ UR St. Louis at Philadelphia. 7:3h p.m Barbara Moxness7X0 72-71-70-7I-284 Washington IX M « « e IM U. Bill Elliott, Ford, IB Hollis Stacy 4X0 75-71-70-71-287 New York at Chicago. 2:X p.m. Toronto fixx XX 70 XI ex B. Elliott F0ri)»Roblnaoii, Bulek, IM m ax Cincinnati at Los Angeles. 10:X p.m. Cathy‘ * Sherk4X0 " ‘rk4“ 7549-72-71-287 Southern U. Beimy Paraona, Ford, IM ' Atlanta at San Diego, 10:X p.m. Patty Sheehan 4,88 77-7346-71-287 LXkmNMnlM LhrtftMkMa Atlanta 1710 00 4« S) ISO M. Terry Hermou, Bulek, US ilif jta i' Xkm«ta itanm-taik Houston at San Francisco, i0;X p.m. Betsy King4!8 7549-70-73-287 Tampa Bay 1X16 04 61 <7 121 . 10. Dick May, Bulek, m Carolyn Hril4!8 72-7448-73-287 Ft. Lauderdale 10 12 46 to X6 IIB U. Jimmy Meant, Pontiac, ISO IMtaten ttatataint AMERICAN ASSOCIATION Sandra Palmer 3X0 72-71-71-74-288 Jacksonville MIS 30 41 XX 111 n . Cedi Gonlon, Bulek, HO ' litas UaN , ilNStai East Kyle O'Brien 3jW 734B-78-71-28 v.taitailrXiliiiil . W L Pet. GB Sandra PostSXO 74- 7^72-70"2n Evansvrtle 60 80 84f. - Jane Blalock 3X0 72-72-72-T3-28 Springfield f2 87 .477 7V^ Carol Mann2X6 X-73-74-73-2X Indianapolis 80 60 .4f8 10 Alice Rilzman2X8 7646-74-73-28 LMwnalhia .ttaitaili Iowa 39 69 XI 20 Pat Bradley 2.^1 764648-76-28 3s J^pOIsmIb 4a RsApSHR West Debbie Austin 2X5 74-73-7^70-28 Ltaris-teH Xk»4ta Omaha 68 44 .607 - Sandra Haynieljno 74-70-72-75-291 SPO R T S t m h : T.ltlta ta kfia XtaaifiaMi Denver 81 49 i£8 6 Vicki Tabor 1X9 7L74-72-74-81 Wichita 84 82 ilOO 11 Carole Jo Gallisonl,819 77-71-70-73-291 Oklahoma City 83 86 .486 W/i Pat Meyers 1X9 7440-75-73-291 HARRY c 'a RAY Saturday's Results Marlc^/Floyd 1X0 72- 70-76-73-292 jin M atei Omaha 13, Wichita 8 Susie McAllister 73- 72-76-73-293 * LtoMNuA ' XSwkgl' Indianapolis 8. EvansvilleO Dale Lundqulst 1 /m 76-73-74-70-298 i'WMaltarii Xtaw. . 'ilnaWi ' Denver?. Oklahoma City 1 M.J. Smith 1,470 73- 72-73-75-293 iS tN llW XMtal Itaaa ; . Springfield 12, Iowa 9.11 innings Penny I ^ l z l ,^ 7449-75-76494 Interviewed by Peter Hanley ■viivwifna M^JkMS T.Bwa tltaM Sunday's Results Cindy H l l l l ^ 77-72-71-74-294 Itota Indianapolis 11. Evansville 4 Dianna Dailey 1X0 8047-73-74-294 H arry Caray, voice o f the Chicago White Sox, atarted broadcast­ Roberta Speer 1X0 76- 73-74-71-294 Oklahoma City 4. Denver 0.1st game ing major-league baseball In ttiS . He afao baa done play-by- Denver 3, Oklahoma City 2,2nd game Joan Joyce 938 75- 74-72-74-295 iMkjtihMwii Iowa 1, ^ringfieldO Barbara Mlzrahle938 72-74-75-74-295 p la y fo r the Louis C ardinals and the O akland A ’s. / LtawtialM tSittadi Wichita 1 Omaha 6.1st game Vicki Fergon938 77- 76-70-73-295 SvlUUriMW wv fwHewWWtaWg iInMwtoHil Wichita 8, Omaha 4J2nd game Theresa Hession638 78- 72-75-70-29f. You’ve always beta kaowM as a very styUsb broodeast». L MtaMwataMUdtaAm Monday's Games Kathy'Postlewait 938 77-76-71-71-295 tta d e te a ■T.liafirtirta LtatmafkwiHi Omaha at Wichita Myra Van Hoose9S8 72-71-75-77-295 How would you describe yoar style? Oklahoma City at Denver Gail Hirata72Q 72- 74-73-77-28 I would say my style is that of the inVeterate fan. My ^ringfieldatlowa Jerilyn Britz720 74- 71-76-75-28 voice goes up when the fan’s voice goes Up. My dejection Evansville at IndiahapolLs Janet Coles 720 76- 72-71-75-28 Tuesday's Games Jennette Kerr 720' 75- 77-74-70-28 shows. I get critical when the fans are critical. I almost boo Ltaoneinw LXaUMina Denver at Wichita Muffin Spencr Dvln720 72- 73-73-76-28 when the fans boo. I am a fan who is fortunate enough to be X.lk»teaMi|i ilnkgaHwbnai Oklahoma City at Omaha Kathy I^Mullen 558 73- 74-74-76-297 in a position where he can relate through his voice, and Ltawtawri tXnaqaJnilM Springfield at Evansville Patty Hayes fX 74- 72-76-75-297 through the mediutn, with other fans like himself. LMhMta XtawOMa Photos by Pinto Iowa at Indianapolis. 2 Holly Hartley rx 73- 75-77-73-297 htahttaelMh Jane Crafter fX 77- 71-76-73-297 Wbat are tbe biggest etaages la broadeastlag slaee yaa’ve INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE Marga Stubblefield 5X 76- 77-74-70-297 lU c W L Pet GB Shelly Hamlin 5.^>6 75- 70-76-74-297 started? Columbus 69 40 .633 - Marty Dickerson iX 74- 74-73-77-28 I hate the thought of so many fine young announcers being L taptadi Richmond 62 46 .874 6t% Mary Dwyer 4X 75- 73-77-73-28 out there in the hinterland like I was. I started in Joliet, I X ta-teH i t a t a l w k Tidewater 86 80 .828 llVi Sharon Barrett 4X 74- 79-75-70-28 went to Kalamazoo, then I moved into St. Louis. I served my I t a e l i i i i CAB CARE Rochester 82 57 .477 17 Pam Miller4X 76- 74-77-71-28 I.Mrawhfi I Pawtucket 80 87 .467 18 Silvia BertolaccinI 413 77- 70-76-76-28 apprenticeship, I improved my vocabulary, Iperfected my U t Nwnli Uam C6RNER Charleston 48 88 .466 18 Connie Chillemi413 80-71-73-7fr-28 style. I learned the game. Then I was ready. When I knocked Syracuse 47 » .443 20>,^ Mardell Wilkins 38 78- 75-77-70-38 on tbe door, I got the opportunity. And boom! I was a success Toledo 48 64 413 24 Kathy Martin 368 77-76-71-77X1 Albert Robinson, of Henry Str««t,check8 out one different It’s blossorning, Saturday's Results ' Vicki Singleton 38 76-77-74-77-301 right away. of eevorel enake plants he has. But this one Is plants are only supposed to do every 100 years. Columbus 4. ^racusc 3 H.B. Duntz323 73-76-76-77-38 Today, these young people with talent, there’s no place for Richmond 8. Toledo 3 Deanie Wood 323 80-72-77-77X8 them to go. As soon as a ballplayer finishes, they move him X ' FawMhnt. Pawtucket 3. Tidewater2 Kelly Fuiks 323 77- 77-74-74-XB hrtinaa i l Rochester 4. Charleston 3.10 innings Mary Mills 323 75- 74-77-76X8 into a broadcasting booth. If it's that easy, some of us sure 1 liii Will Sunday's Results Judy Clark 73-78-78-74-X8 wasted an awfulu llo t of time. ■ Now an athlete becomes a fetata X kwtbihia Xi/, Charleston 1^ Rochester 12 M in^ Moore 76- 76-77-74-3© broadcaster without ever having been before a microphone. Lhtta ta wh M XIiSNritStalta Columbus 7. ^racuse4 Sue Mnnctt 78- 75-77-74-304 Richmond7, ToledoS Cindy Chamberlin 80-73-78-73-304 1 think it’s unfortunate. I don’t resent the ballplayer's USiltetlaXMiw Tidewater 7, Pawtucket 1 . Vivian Brownlee 75-77-78-75-X5 success. But it deprives so many deserving young talents Monday’s Games Rosey Bartlett 73-77-77-76-305. around the nation of the opportunity that they should have Richmond at Syracuse Barbara Barrow 81-73-80-73-38 Columbus at Rochester Laura Hurlbut 77- 74-7681-3© somewhere along the line. Pawtucket at Richmond Noreen Uihlcin 77-75-7679-3© Wbat da yoatUak of tbe boaaihg cable TV market, wklekls Tuesday's Games June Staton 75- 79-83-79--316 H 1 1 ' . ^ Tidewater at Toledo Kathy Young 7667-77-dq ebaa^ag tbe shape of sports broadeastlag? Charleston at Syracuse Kathy Whitworth 75-72-75-35-dq IdoiT t think therea ever going to be anything free Columbus at Rochester anymore. People are going to he able to see more sports Pawtucket at Richmond than they ever saw in their lives. But they're also going to EASTERN LEAGUE pay for iL I foresee the day when the owners of sports fran- (Second Half) c h l ^ will be opening the u te s for free and offering induce­ North ments to get people Into the ballpark so that tbe stands will W L Pet. GB l|ta|j||g|r JbigUB Glens Falls a 18 - not be empty. Most of the people will stay at home where the Buffalo 19 19 .500 9Vk beer is colder, the hot do0 cheaper, tiie comforts greater. I ^ n 17 19 .472 4^ And for a few dollars a month, why not stay home and eqjoy Holyoke 19 26 .333 10 South it? AUTO REPAIRS TaUlag a man to ehaufo thb Bristol a 15 iX ~ Yoa’ve worked for two ot tbe mast laaovative owners in way he drives Is aSoot like West Haven 19 17 .5K 2Vk baseball history, Bill Veeck of tbe White Sox sad Charlie telling him to change thy way Reading 19 19 XO 3^ ^ WB SiRViCE ALL he eata, lo without boing Waterbury 17 18 .488 4 FbUeyoftbeA% WbatthyoaObiketlbem? preachy, here are acme teoU Saturday's Results a n t v Charlie Finley disproved this old baloney that you have to /yon nUght Uka to know ... Glens FalU9. BuffaIo2 be in baseball 50 years before you know the game. I think ■ Vj-.T^T ■ ^ Lynn8, Bristol 1.1st game Driving fast MMS much mote Bristol 9. Lynn 3.2nd game executives In baseDall perpetuate their Jobs with this kind of gna than driving slow... H air Holyoke 3. Re^ing^2 thinking Finley was a very successful millionaire Inaurantii raising, vrbeeleiiinnlng, scare- Wa(erbu^8. W e i^ v e n 2 man when be got Into basebkll. He ran his baseball business lAUM iCHANiaailE^ thohaby acedenUon naet gna Sunday's Results like a 747 takii« M ... Cknller ReadJng8, Holyoke4 out of his briefcase. He didn't have the office forces most Buffalo!. Lynn2 teams have, yet be came up with the last dynasty we've had. . atarta mean gtolltr gai bllla ... Bristol9. Glens Falls8 MONOAV The O a k lw team won three consecutive world cham­ The mental approach to West Haven 10. Waterbury 3 SSnuaJmiMH driving In aimple ... Jast con- Monday's Games pionships. Lord only knows how many in a row they would cnntmlo on ttwjob at hand— Reading at Holyoke nave won had be been able to keep that team together. If a driving tha oar propwty—and Buffalo at Lynn ball club wanted a* great general manager, Charlie Finley, ^csMMwnlRsw^^ any othar problom. will Glens Falls at Bristol would be tbe guy I suggest they hire. antomntlcnay ho puabad faiio West Haven at Waterbury Bill Veeck u the most remarkable human being I've ever 24 HOin OinCRBI tkRVNi Um manUl "pending" Me ... Tuesday's Games 7i00 TV be able to eonoatm ta felly Beading at Holyoke Ite r met If the baseball owners had listened to him years ago Buffalo at Lynn an driviag, the aritunmant „ »i*0 during' tbe Curt Flood case ,r- when Veeck was one of the has to be tig h t... IlM most Im­ Glens Falls at Bristol 0 CNN ■part* witnesses for Flo^ and wamsd the owners of what was Watertury at West Riven 'MO portant hniaeustar In this GOO- (B) AAAMm M down the line in the way of the reserve clause, and that they ' neption H to he oempletaly MO should do something about It now — all the trouble that relaasd to the driviiw sent IP W MoimyNioMOMiONi baseball has had, including the strike, vrould never have . jCatp yunr oar tm taiii al Jti _ l i d o maxlminn perfetmnaoe by h sro ro R d i haring tt naryteed regidiity U BUI Veeck w u a man of the people. Ids main intereat w m DtuM roRO. opanMdti- tbe comfort of the fan at the gaiM. He won pemants with ■ hr. We are natboriasd to da aU (H> OpiitiOiJLr the Indians In 1948 and the Sos In 1955, but nevta won. ■V toclaiy wnrm ntoe week boUi ffl>NMl>NIIINIOirN»ilimilllnii with the White 8oi the aecond tUne around. AIJIO 1^1 PAIR fiiriiiH iN ST. body ead mechealcel. CUfMWUlM But the success the Sos have bad this season is primarily Completa trenamimloe end tiOO because of the efforta of BUI VeedL He’s the guy. that slgnsd m a n c h e s t i r aogtne aervloe; naetrealc ) NFtAneWreeWie digtoe Unaapa are daaa h ■ OM* Ron Leflore and Jim E M u . He’s the guy rNmoasible f^r all TEL. t4M 464 by toetonr tiatoed toohaldi MO these young pttchen who have made Uw White Sox a very AU major cradit parda respectaUe boUclnb. Then the new *'*■•*• came aloiig and hoeocad. lU w an a m at u got Cariton Fisk and Om Luxtasky. A U ^ a suddsn a very DOiiON'niiiD, u* I S i m. QIant Royal Lilies reach for the sky. had bellclob of a year egoTs a eontsoder thh year. by eaUiia I041M . "Wha the garden ot Mrs.' Irene Brennan ot 73-B PrtrrOoalfriialMjn) MM-7S4MH dapandabMtylaatradMM.' Mrs. 'cufton Martin of 286 Copper Hill ist. braces her gardenia which Is top-heavy with blossoms: Charter Oak St., la bursting with color as her Amh Niirthll.TXX 7X4MI-7I-MI BriMvUotrkrXI.TXXI TI-TD-Td-TMM . ------tf - I \ - 14 — THE HERALD. Mon., Aug, 8, 1981 THE HERALD. Mon.. Aug. 3, 1981 — 15 Freemans ore elected When it's harvest . 1 to state Legion posts

Eugene W. Freeman was elected Department Commander, the highest office in the Department of Cwuiecticut American Legion, at the state’s annual convention held in Hartford. Freeman is the first member of Dilworth-Comell-Quey Post #102 to have achieved this honor. Freeman was bom in Falmouth, Mass., and moved to Manchester in 1941. He retired this year after 40 years of service at the United Technology Corp. He Joined the local Post in 1954 on his service in World War II, 1943- 1946, in the European Theatre of operations. He saw action in England, France, Belgium and Ger­ many, and was wounded in Ger­ many in the final days of the war. He received the Purple Heart, Bropze Star, Infantry Rifle Badge, Good Conduct Medal and five cam­ paign stars. His service to the Legion on the Post level covers, serving as Adju­ Eugene Freeman Laura Freeman Colonel Nathan AgosUnelll of Manchester, at his tenure as commander of the Command and tant for nine years, three terms on Control Headquarters' In New London. the Executive Committee and right. Is congratulated by Major General John F. served as Commander 1957-1958. Freund, State Adjutant General, after receiving Agostinelll, who Is president of the Manchester promoting the program of the State3ank In civilian life. Is currently performing During that year the Post Executive Committeeman from the the Merltorlus Service Medal for exemplary ser­ Baseball Team won the state cham­ First District. Auxiliary. She served through the vice M d the Army Commendation Medal for two weeks annual training with his unit at the pionship. He also reactivated the As Senior Vice Commander in chairs of the First District Auxiliary demonstrating outstanding leadership during East Lyme facility. Sons of the American Legion ouring 1980-1981 Freeman’s program was and was President in 1977-1978. She his year as Commander. He has Membership and under his chair­ has served the Department on the been involved with the Bingo, the manship halted the decline in following programs. Gold Star renovations and other fund raisers membership for the State American Mothers, Merit, Junior Girls, Two Massey-Ferguson 750 combines cut wheat cutters out of Clearwater, Kan. Winter wheat Is of the Post. He served as President, Legion. Americanism, Education and Children and Youth. As Senior Vice on afield north of Rosel In Pawnee County, Kan., planted In the fall, lays dormant underground Secretary and Treasurer of the Past He is a member of the South Post Commander Association. Methodist United church, the Mason President, her duty is to promote at sunset. The combines are owned by Paul Cole during the winter, membership. and Jack McCreary, who run a crew of custom Freeman went on to serve the first Lodge #73 and the Veterans of District American Legion in all the F oreign W ars P ost 2046 of On the community level she has offices and became District Com­ Manchester. served on the Manchester Chapter mander in 1969-1970. (That year he He is married to Laura Freeman, of the American Cancer Society and received the honor of being a Goal a Past President of Unit #102, who the Town iBicentennial Ball Com­ District Commander). Freeman has was elected Department Senior Vice mittee. ' great fall fabrics served the Department on com­ President. The couple resides at 36 She is a member of South United mittees for Children and Youth, Edmund St. Methodist Church, Temple Chapter the International Ladies Calvin Klein and Pauline a dress or pants costume, Americanism, Trophies and She joined the Dilworth-Comell- No. 53 O.E.S., American Business NEW YORK (NBA) - accented with glitter Womens' Association, the Army and While Europe’s designers Garmet Workers Union Trigere showed them. Nat Awards, Testimonial Dinner'Chair­ (juey Unit #102 in 1969 and served as offered a good overview of Kaplan liked a classic coat edging. For day, gold is the man, Sons of the American Legion President four terms. She has Navy Auxiliary and the Ladies look for new silhouettes stripe in a plaid blouse or Auxiliary to the V.F.W. and other novelties. New fall fashion trends. From in gray, white and tan and two years as Department served on all chairmanships Ellen Tracy came beige checked wool-mohair the piping on a Western- York designers tend to yoked shirt. offer new versions of the corduroy jodphurs and blend, over a winter white clothes they think women wool walki^ shorts, but wool dress. One of the pret­ Some'fall fashions look will want for their she also did a sporty tweed tiest suits, Ellen l a c y ’s almost too rich to their Al HirschfeW lifestyles. For falj, new Jadcet, a blouson jacket, a shapely Jacket w itlr top- generous use of cashmere, versions mean emphasis on beige ruffled shirt and a puffed sleeves and a soft wools, hohair, came’s .'i fabrics rather than on cashmere sweater. graceful circular skirt, hair, velvet and fur, but the novelty in styling. Cashmere is one of the came in rose Shetland idea is to offer women as classic quality fabrics that wool. Velvet was often Truck driver Kevin X d w lx ^ Smith, 19, from Bk combine.uploads its bln.of just>cut wheat. For every bloomer or combined with other many choices as possible. jodphur pant, there are 10 is going big for fall. If you don’t like piling on about Creek, Neb.,.sits .on the edge of his truck as a i ■ s' ■ ^ ’ fabrics, such as Bill Blass’ Talks his trade Vera Maxwell has the layers, then choose a styles in slacks or Jeans taupe velvet dirndl with a cuts. The blazer may have always made fabrics her classic suit, plus a big 'first concern. She was white silk blouse and NEW YORK (NEA) - jump even with earplugs.” been laid to test for a shawl. Designers showed "Tell me, Mr. Hirschfeld, Instead, he and his wife, among the first to in- peacock blue wool coat. full skirts, full tops and while, since there has been Fashion is on the gold how can T find a Job with Dolly, often have people in so m u ^ of it, but the new ’ troduce U llrasi^e, and capes, but you can have a security?” the young ar-. hacking.Jackets or. loose *be showed _^he con- standard, poured out fitted Jacket and full skirt for dinner. And there’s lavishly for evening, as in tlsts ask. 78-year-old sprite dinner out, and there are M ary M c F a d d en ’s or vice versa. who appropriated the art of the constant assignments futuristic pants costume to caricature 50 years ago and — "I’m illustrating ‘Street­ molten gold lame, or Oscar As for colors, they’re shows no signs of sur­ car Named Desire’ for de la Renta’s gold lace rich, too, in forest gr^n, rendering it — shrugs. Limited Editions now” — dresses. More discreet are persimmon, red, black and "I tell them, security is from editors who never ask Jonathan Hitchcock’s a range of vivid blues, such in yourself. 'The Depres­ for revisions. “That only shimmery gray matte as royal and peacock. Mix sion taught me that, happens with writers,” he Jersey evening separates, them. Just as you mix although I don’t recom­ says. "S.J. Perelman, that Gracian-drap^ whether as silhouettes and fabrics. mend learning that way,” great master, told me the he says, chortling. least number of questions “ Whatever talents you he’d ever gotten for any have,, you push as far as piece he’d ever done for you can and, if you have The New Yorker was 28!” your health, that’s about it. He laughs, amazed. But everyone is talented. If you can touch, see, hear, feel and taste, my God, Mighty that’s generous. That’s the real miracle. The rest is mushroom gravy.” Al Hirschfeld Is often asked his secret by The youngest of three LONDON (UPI) - The sons, Hirschfeld was bom aspiring artists. “Whatever talents you have, you Mighty Mushroom is a new in St. Louis and reared in push as far as you can..." At 79, he still puts In a protein food approved for K ^ New York. Unconven­ full day’s work. "I don’t consider It work. I don’t humans but the question ^/' > # tionally. “My mother know what the devil else I would do,” he says, hanging over it, as its worked in a department laughing. creators prepare for test -■M store and supported the marketing, is whether the family while my father, however, he was does have to, to produce his gastronomically conser­ who was an umpire and a employed, illustrating for weekly drawing for The vative British are ready Bob Dunekacke, In the cab of his combine, cuts 29 now) and In 1975 became a full partner with starter at the trotting newspapers, but barely New York Times, he sits in for a radical innovation in wheat north of Sanford, Kan.,'located In Pawnee Ivan Gottula. races up hear near the gainfully. So in ’31, off he the dark, scribbling notes diet. County. He’s been a cutter since he was 16 (he's j Elast River, took care of went again, this time to and symbols on a pad to Only now, after decades the house and taught us paint, in Tahiti first ("a refresh his memory later of marketing efforts, have how to pitch pennies and stinking hole!” ) and then when he draws the subject. the British finally accepted shoot craps.” He chortles in Bali. “An artist I knew For Elizabeth Taylor, who the American-style fast- again. left me his bike, some made her Broadway debut food hamburger. Ek]ually “ I suppose I started forks and knives and I this year in “The Little intense efforts to stuff the drawing at 3. It’s a kind of stayed.” There was no Foxes,” his notes included American-style hot dog sickness. I never thought of electricity, no roads, no “Cleopatra’’ (eyes), down British throats have doing anything else.” Well, other foreigners, he says, "pouter pigeon” (shape), largely failed. So have he did play sem i-pro but for him there was the and “ O’C edar m op” campaigns to introduce baseball for fun and com- revelation of what "line” (hair). most of the more recent pete in six-day bicycle could produce, Every morning at 10:00 products such as soybean races, but, by 18, he was Since then, Hirschfeld or so, he enters his studio meat extenders and other art director for Selznick has manipulated simple on the fourth floor of his meat substitutes. Films in New Jersey, line to snare the essense of brownstone on the upper As a result, the Rank "Selznick persuaded me to every name on and off East Side and sits down in Hovis McDougall (RHM) open my own studio to do Broadway, most frequent- the barber chair he bought combine, which found the or Reuben Thomas. Right, Nat Kaplan’s coat In all his artwork, so I hired ly for The New York 50 years ago on the fungus and nurtured it into all these fellows and then Times. (“ H irschfeld’s a new type food, is having The hands are those of wheat farmer Gust Cur- tf» Qrain by thrfShlng It In the palm of gray, white and tan with an ascot Is soft, nubby Bowery, to pursue his terpreted by Ellen Tracy l^foae Shetland wool. he went bankrupt. For the W orld,’’ a paperback sinuous lin e a t a trouble attracting a com­ tis, 76, of Hudson, Kan., Inspeottng his crop, C e n te r, a 90ft look for- evening In this mohalr-wool blend. . next two years. I worked in coilection of 143 of his monstrous, tilt-board mercial partner. It • ■ ' V / r shimmering matte jersey for Jonathan Hitchcock Warner Bros.’ art depart- caricatures has Just been worktable he bought at appealed to the National \ : . r • ment and lived at home so I published by Abrams, Inc.) auction in Greenwhich Enterprise Board, which Something Different...... Wish Sgmeone A could pay my debts. Then I When that line is "sim- Village___ to go with the encourages British in­ decided I would never get pie, communicative and chair. “ I’m called itiative, and has been I UPl photos ^ c ^ Happy Birthday. involved in that kind of expands my limits to the downstairs for lunch at loaned $2 million a year to Prog^m to'did MBA lousy Joh again!” full. I’m pleased,” he.says, noon and I return about ensure test marketing with A HaraM Happy Heart J_K Off he went to Paris in But then, he seems pleased 1:00 p.m. and stay until 5.1 later this year and com­ 1924 tq sculpt, with gSOO altogether: undistributed don’t consider it work. I mercial production in 1963. '■ O n l y ^ The East Hartford Park and will benefit the patients' of the 1350,000 had been allocated for backing from ah uncle, by deadlines; immune to don’t know what the devil The Mighty Mushroom is $6.00 Recreation Department' is -spon- Northern Connecticut Chapter of research at the University of “You could get a meal for anxiety in general. "Ever- else I would do,” he says, better known to science as ' s, soring Its 1st Annual ^ rtsta c u la r MDA. 1 Connecticut, Qulnnlpiac College and ROBIRT J. 8MITM, Me. Prizes will be awarded to the top 24 cents so it was possible body has the same Uushinef.” ! don’t play golf Fusarium or AS-5. It was i^to benefit the Muscular Dystrophy Yale University. MDA also supports for a young artist without problems. You solve them or tennis. I’n not crazy discovered In a garden not fund-raisers. An awards ceremony the noost comprehensive and tet«)- money to discover himself to the best of your ahillty, about cocktail parties — I f a r from the RHM 'S Association on Friday, Aug, 7, from wiU'be held at the conclusion of the ‘f 10 a.m. to S p.iii. at Ooodum Park in sive. patient service program in , in t h ^ years. There was so why go on worrying find myself out on the laboratories during a 1114 : H aM m .1 A rain date will be Sportnacular. Everyone who partlc eUstinoe of any beuth agency, great Camaraderie and you about toem?” There is, he street with one too many search for a mold that scheduled for Aiig. 14. pates In the event will receive an. requiring no meSns test. AddiUonal- had a chance to loaf, which says, nothing he wants to drinks and no food except would turn glucose into award and an iron-on transfer. ly, MDA funds /muscle disease is essential in the arts. This do that he hasn’t done all those damn little proteins. A Sportstacular consists of Anyone attending the East Hartford clinics at four .locations In Connec­ (p S lIa... various sports events in which the is a lemming profession, because If there were, “I things.”. This was 1968 and after 849 241 summer ticut, Including the muscle disease which guarantor full un- would do it.’’ If Louis Armstrong were testing and screeniito the *S i children compete for gold, sliver in the clinics at the Newington Children's ^ 3 - 2 7 1 1 {sBd breoss medals. Tbs chlldrsn employment for the rest of He’s quite content to at­ still playing somewhere, microorganisms in the 3,- M I . Cemsr Strsisl Ask f0f....i. be able to sign up Hospital and the University of life,''| he says. tend all Broadway be’d go there, but dis- 000 samples collected, Mawetieeler, Cl. ^ ' will be asked to procure donations supervisor. * Connecticut Health Center In Far­ openings, whether or not *Pam ' {or the number of events In vrhlch cotheques, he says, "make Fusarium was rated the •:1a Conneotlout alone during the mington. —■ he has to; and when he every nerve in my body most promisina. Dunekacke sits In the cab of his combine as another cuts In front of him. C- they particinate and all proceeds 1960 calendar year, In excess of In New York, w ■ ,4(. V. , THE HERALD. Mon., Aug. 3, 1981 - ]7 1 6 - THE HERALD, Mon., Aut. 3, IWl . i ' Daughter can't cope TV tonight

Pappaa. (Part ona of a fiva-part can Idantlfy hor aacakant, tho pokoa ■Mteroaiina.) eloao hor oaoa wtItMNrt arraatkig tha B S s a d H a r d y TV channels X V ABCNowaNIthtlIno auapaot. 6ho hiroa Harry Oto find out t:40 with parents' problem DfSCDagWuiwa TodKopp^. why.fRapoat) ® H«na j CMooAaaTtwMoa J w r t t . H a rIM martlalod aftar ha lo S V Star Trek 'Tha Naked Ttma' children. W e live in a nice house in a Operation Cork, 8939 Villa La V S ie iR ICeatlauaa Proai auapaotad of bafog a traitor, during Movlo-(Comady)**H **Plrot A b b y D aylln a ) 'MadanaRoaa' 187S WWLP, Bprlngflald (NBC) grOf nice neighborhood. We aren’t poor Jolla, San Diego, Calif. 92037. If OnamaR Koroan war. Uhra .) NttdloMualear* 1B7B Cindy a Mevla -(SuapaBaa) ••• N a Slgaorat. Oaiida Oaapilln. ABCCaptlonadtiowi Wllllama. Racy riot Inaplrod by tha “ TargaU” IS a S BorlaKarloH. and we aren’t rich either. Mom Abigail you can tend 81’ to cover coat of WIDH. Hartford (PBB) » marquaaa of 42nd Btroat. (Rated R> WVIT. Naw Britain (NBC) (06mina.) Jamaa Brown. An aging horror alar works part tim e as a nurse, and Dad mailing, please do, at it is a non­ IBBBK, Boaton (DHauda oonfronta a poychopatMo anipar at a Van Buren tiOO drtva*ln movla theatre. (90 mlna.) works every day except weekends— profit organUation. If you don't WQQB. Springflaid (ABC) Boat Of Midday WOBY. SpringHaM (PBt) GD BIxMMenDoBarllan CD 3:10 and that’s when the trouble starts. ® have the dollar, the organiutlon B Ivaalaa M (DMovlo-ad starts drinking on Friday night Btar*'1BB> Clark Qabla, Ava ® NPLArmWrooBkHIParti. 9:26 will tend one free. ooadaela Uia Uoaloa Symphony Programa toon on Channal O BportatlpdatoThalataat aporta M , Hartford, aro alto toon on (terdnor. Two bittor political rfvala CD ThoughtaToUvaBy and t e stays drunk all weekend. OreMsNa la •ttSvMMn'a'Violin fight forthotwuthingathaylova meat; roauHa for tha Waat Coaat aporla ASHAMED IN INDIANAPOLIS CoiMarto’ aad ■rahma‘Symphony Channal 19. Norwich. 9:90 When he’s drunk he gets mean to Channala 11. 14, 91 and 23 ]^ (a a and tha aama girt. (8 hra.) (D AM Night Weather Sorvtea DEAR ABBY; A follow-up to Don­ Ne.S'.mhahPartmanlalasiaradaa (nlBeeebekHaiOfPamoInduellon t t Oat Smart Mom, and there’s so much yelling DEAR ASHAMEDi You are not vMlnaoloM.(eomiMj aro raealvad only by cable 1:28 4KX) na In the lost-and-found-department Qgroaaonloa CDl and fighting T ’m afraid the aloite. There are more kidt with talavlalon aubacribara. VDr.Boolt( of Eastern Airlines in Seattle; It’s a y -- M . B Nawa WoHd Dally aawa I woonun noorowo 1:90 4:90 neighbors will hear it. ydur problem that you know. I V PPonUayl M ta a y Inland A flamboyant Moment Of MadRation O 22AMva good idea to put I.D. tegs on all your ooamalloa tycoon uaaa an unuaual Now Mom has started to drink BportaCanlar ^ 4:99 recently read an excellent little luggage, inside and out, but here’s oompanloa aro ahut down. Claude.. • ploytoanaoamllllonalraandBraouJa OvamIgtitDaakBcctoltha day's dMovla-fThrMar)** “Friday,The with him, and she even drinks book titled, “The Secret Everyone WaidM••aakaFtaWakfapollHoallavor ihrMaaalnwtMnatamouaaelor.who Sreports: Nawsdask.Praamsn 19th'* 1090 No Other Information another suggestion: (D OarelUaraanAadPrieaSa by offarlaghlm a divoroa from olalma to bo a ralallva of Count during the daytime when she’s Reports, Sports Updsts, snd Avallabis. (Rated R) (116 mins.) Knows." Its author, Cathleen Put your destination address in­ K Pam Swid. iydla Oonaa. Cgaalanoa. (Rapaat: 2 hra.) Ortouin, wtnla lo proptro lor hla home. When Dad comes home and Brooks, grew up with alcoholic I — •Nawa B lie*-m iraar)4 » “Frtday.The moat ohaHanolne roia by vMtlne tha stead of your home address In the TtaiaaDeaah ISM” 1SSO No Otiwr Information she’s been drinking, they have a big lormar hunllnp grounda ot hla parents and knows what a child I.D. holders. ’That way, should your John Denver Evangeline Qouletas-Carey a W i a e i K m AvalMblo. (Rntnd R) (2 hra.) •noaalor. (Rapaat: 70 mhu.) fi^ t. I’m afraid they are going to . ^ 0«aftaayCkiam;ConadMnI>loh SiSO must do in order to survive in that luggage be lost, misdirected' or ‘Smolhara.HoalHaghDowna. ’ *d»g get a divorce. I’m ashamed to have ® (D MoeaaCiSaAdnrnnendmnn CD CBSLatoMo«ra‘OUgiCY,M.e.: environment. She explains 'delayed, when located it w ill be sent m onad CapMeaad. U.B.A.) haa ptaalad a bomb aonwwhara in Dead And AItvp' Quiney baoomaa m y friends over, and I don’t want to B i e S NmahartHiew alcoholism for the disease it is to-where you are, not where you Kanainplon Hoapital and rail a Involved in a difflouti foranalo cinema go anywhere when my parents are and tells kids how to deai with thraalanawnotawhlohhaaaraantlra tdantHloatlonprolootwhonthafamtty W6r6l Feopletalk MfftorawMelha walla. (RapaaO of a young man. tha praaumod vtotim drinking because I worry about my drinking parents and where to get REILLY, ST. PETERSBURG, 7 M B B Tynipenl Tha Laura Oaan ofabomb.lnalatathabpylaaiMallva. brother, who’s 9, and m y sister, heip in their own communities. Danoara tad Mualelana parform a (Rapaat) 'HARRY O: Raflaollonc' FLA. major naw work, 'Tympanl', Harry laama that hla ax*partnar has Harlford- and the Hound 1:55, 4:30, 7, who’s 6. It’s not only for children. A 40-, IjaaNaNa eompooad and ohoraosraphad by bean murdered and that a woman Alheneuni — Voyage en 9:15. What can I do, Abby? Don’t tell Dear Reilly i Smart move rather JB M C N a w a Laura Daan, ona ol Iho moot vital fitting a daaectpt ion of Harry' a former year-old friend told me that her Douce 7:30, 9:30. Slorrs me -to try to talk some sense into than depending on the luck o' the Roberta in Jamaica 1 BaNaaya toroaa In oonlamporaty danoa. wife waa aaan entering hit room father .had died 22 years ago of ) MiottiCMitof B TheTeMoSyeegd ahortly before Me daath. (Rapaat) East Hartford Trans Lux College them. Who would listen to a 12-year- chronic alcoholism, and after Irish. ) PamimlOIFaNh 12:90 Roberta Flack will join Jamaican Quaal: John 8 Poor Richards — Can­ Twin — Tarzan and the old kid? (X) CD Leu Brant A Tribunn atory Hegan'aHareaa reggae stars and other pop singers Bobaadan. •boat a doomaday groap, paopla Movla-(Thrlllar)** *'Tha nonball Run 7:30, 9:30. Ape Man 7, 9:15. — theEm- In a festival in Jamaica this week, BM eeaySna PliwnMI, bumnata praparlng al aS ooala to aanlva in a Awakening** 1980 Charlton Showcase Cinema — pire Strikes Back 7, 9:30. .ith (Saaalar.eemaateWehlanlnBlirator Heaton, Buaannah York. A Britich Aug. 8-8, to conunemorate reggae gmphaala• mihaWaaSiraalday. Lea and Roaal whan may ara oaugM arehaotogltt violataa tha tomb of an Superman II 1:30, 4:10, Vernon Cine I & 2 — AAACC superstar Bob Marley, who died of B N a w a hHar atorm. (Rapaat; eo mkia.) Egyptian quean whoa# evil spirit 7:10, 9:45. — Wolfen 2:30, The Four Seasons 7, 9:15. .fCoaiady)')•• “ SwlBi BMeirtatM evle- Newa •aoapaa and antara tha tout of hla 4:45, 7;35, 10. - endless cancer May 17. taaai" 11SBO#i------JaaiaaDaashtoh, unborn child and raincamataa Haalf — Cannonball Run 7:30, The festival, to be called Reggae Staphan Farat. A awlui taam haah‘1 HFreaun e Neperta A ena hour whan the child tuma 16. (Rated R) Love 2:05, 4:35, 7:20, 9:55. 9:30. Sunsplash, w ill be held at Jarrett woa a maal In tha paal aavaa yaara. national oatl-ln, ln.daplh talk ahow — Tarzan, The Ape Man Drive-Ins bal whh a naw ooaah Mwy imeM whi iallvaaHdIanoa. I d s Tomorrow Coaal* Potpourri Park in Montego Bay under the ir.(RMedPa>(Shra.) CanoaollDelFileia Ttma TO'Coaat Quaata: Tbomac Haams, 1;50, 4:20, 9:40. — Stripes East Windsor — Clfin- sponsorship of the government of gSei^'n m Attn PhHComna.(60mlna.) 2:15,4:45,7:25,9:45.-For taonball Runs and f 19:40 « - ■ »------a--a New York party Jamaica. _fi6*arUaayauaat:ConMdlanOlok mWWBWefOTfn tWwV CD CBS Lata Movla 'HARRY O: Your Eyes Only 1:35, 4:15, Brubaker, at dusk. Day Camp Roundup: The Manchester Area have been working with MACC staffers on various . Others taking part are Jamaican SfflOthare. Heat Hush Downa. Hylpealally la Baing MgM A VIotIm' Although a young rape victim 7:15, 9:50. — Arthur 2:30, Manchester— Take "niis (Cloaad-CapMonad. U.8.A) ona-man aUga ahow drawn from tha Conference o f Churches sponsored Interfaith Day Camp MACC sponsored projects. ’The additional mandbwer is reggae stars Jimmy Cliff, ’Third 4:50,7:40,10.05. — The Fox Job and Shove It 8:30. — party at the Algonquin Hotel In Ne V York ^ TM wtWngaaiaoorga Barnard Shw.and closed with pops, snaps and sad smiles July 24. For two a boon to our programs requiring “ muscle power” to Elizabeth Taylor .(left), starring In ‘T h e Little World, and Two Centimeters, and B BaSyMumSara addraaaadprinoipalyramaloploaolBIehCouoNBhow Baltimore Bullet 10. operate. We look forward to continued liaison with the Foxes" on Broadway, chats with the play's celebrating last week’s marriage of Prince 700 woman,DovoASoaShew aox and marttaga. exciting weeks area youngsters were treated to the British rock group Steel Pulse. IHepaMaa S Voluntary Action Center, as the program thus far has Charles and Lady Diana Spencer, (UPl ANTONIO’S iNOuicfiicanwiMi/ rollerskating at Skate Fantasy, a carousel ride in producer, Zev Bufman, as Dame Margot ) AlbiTiieFandiy CDCDCDaAi'B’Naws INTISSTATU S4 tXIT Bt SILVUS LSNU proved to be a great success. photo) I) WM WM WatM Of Aniniala (E mjlsjl PIZZA and RESTAURANT ■AST HAnTSOnO BSS-tSIO Bushnell Park, a magic show, swimming adventures Fonteyn looks on. They-were attending a )rs for tosh SarFem ly Fatal W Mnaolx SASOAIH MATIHUl DAILY and day trips. On closing day, "M ary the Clown” was on ) FaeeTheHualo B NFtAnaWrnotBngPirt2. 988 Main St., Manchagtar riSSTSHOWOULVll.BO hand to help transfer our campers into delightful clown er reggae star, Peter Tosh, ) KandkaaaiMtomenOIDeMli (B HBO Btioak Frautow: Augunl \000Fyrenld Jerry gilllor and Anne Monrn Antonio’s will be closed apprentices. I for one had trouble Indentifylng even well kidred o ff a 55-city North American _ l CNNSFomAraportonwhat'a hlshllghl Iho apoomlng movlon, known young friends from my own neighborhood. Clown tour with four sold-out perfor­ happanad and what'a ahaad hi tporra and tpooialn on HBO ki for vacation make-up, calliope music (provided by Mary the Clown) mances in New York City. BBMaeWaS LahrarHapnrt Httiwyiyrar ...... August 3rd thru August 17th hot dogs, pop and buttered com on the cob lent a true Among those giving him standing B BpoftofonlgMAaihahlqhllghta •» festival air to the grounds at Concordia Lutheran • ^ ovations w ere tennis stars John tram aS tha notion whh Wok Chnrtoa BTI oTooDoo^ and Bob Kuril. Church. We found the Camp Director, Rev. David Stacy McEnroe and Vitas Gerulaiti, and B bMovla-(Thrlllar)** “ Tha We will reopen manning the grill....Sue & Cathy Ryan cooking Si ser­ rock stars Graham Parker, Rick B Tafaulalew Tetilght Pravlaw on Tanant” 1B7S Mutvyn Dougluv, tha baal bate tor tatavlawlne that Sholloy Wlnturu. A timid Ilia olurk Tuesday, August 18 PC ving with the regular kitchen staff along with Kevin Derringer, .Ellen Foley and Ron night. rants n dssrspit npirtmont from Kennedy & Rich Tramanteno. Dalia Leal created Woods of the Rolling Stones. _ gjOO whioh Iho prsvloun tsntnl had Watch for bigger & better The Manchester Herald Robert Kennedy Jr. visited (D (D WKBFhiCraeliiaeU Aralong magic moments in helping the campers fashion and pre­ Igald baaktaaa hmetraa. maaaad up nsleRbornappaarlobooonnpktneto sent beautiful hand crafted “ mem ories” to a tired but Tosh backstage after the final per- sulaa aooouatu and n boltln In hin drlvthlmtonulakra.(RatodR)(2hru., specials starting August 18. formancce.. dank nS part at Hwb Tnrink'n lob, or SOm happy steK of counselors and helpers. As the bus pulled Roberta Flack dooa ho hove a drinkbig problamO Conanollcat geraonbig Roam away homeward bound, wide smiles, (clown make-up NOW OFFERS (BapaaO OddCoapra The most fun smeared with ice cream and picnic fun) all echoed: QDFHMagaMw B lDtekCaiaWihew 643-4349 Amanda’S sylphide cuB m cCoaiadyt c m pnntnl S u I m oney ca n b u y I “ We want to come back next year please!” We wish to 9 ) ThaChfMMhrtaUinn ‘Pitnoso And (D MMatoaMwooutgra . thank the good people of Manchester once again for Amanda McKerrow, who. at 17 cream cones and cheeseburgers at CD CBB BaForlK Tho OafMWS Of won a gold medal in the Moscow M)AAABtttb ii Omaha Roynlnvn Tha Ualtad Blafat CBS Nawa helping to create the very special magic of Day Camp. the Dairy Queen on a main street in oorronpondtnl Dan Ralhtr inshort Ballet Competition this June, w ill Liberty, Texas, while awaiting trial B li K ailiBartWioriTiWiWavarFly ihlnipaolalnnwnnotttaraouilnBon appear in the Jacob's Pillow Dance JstnhoMDIokCavalllarioloanrloofc U.S.dtrannaandlhaoomlnaolaeool Farm er’s Market: Sliding right into August just a hot this fall in the Jan. 19 shooting death at tha kivsntoru and kivsntlonn that Iho nuotoor ora. Rathor to Johwd by ■ minute behind Day Camp brings the MACC sponsored • Festival at Lee, Mass., on Tuesday. of Price Daniel Jr. havaohineadlhaftoootouriwtlon. Spsolil Corranpondani Waltar •si...o wsohii w o ngoei -u O -* Farmer’s Market into mid-summer offerings of all the COVERAGE She w ill dance the pas de deux from Mrs. Daniel contends she shot tram..... Banjornln Franklki'n oxpor. Cronkila.andoorraapondtnraid 100 ' “ Les SylpUdes” with Shnon Dow. imania with olaslrlolly to Ihs' Bradlsy. Harry Raanonar. Bob best our area can grow. Fresh picked produce, honey, Daniel, member of a prominent otobori ra nslantlflo kvwvatlont of sohlsttar.RlohardThrtlialdandlis bread just-out-of-the-oven, and home crafted goods are Miss McKerrow’s appearance is Liberty family, in self-defense. M f S a Lilli# HoaaaOa Tha displayed for sale every Saturday morning from 10 to 1 part of a four-day program, “ Ballet: Mrs. Daniel told the Dallas Times Walt Disney Frobto Jonathan Oarvoy't aUomrt Productiont’ p.m. Enjoy a walk on Main Street this weekend and find, All That Glitters,” featuring medal Herald she returned to workihg at to trail a Iralghi kradkig buthrano In winners in international dance com­ thwarted by asang ot young hoodt; our local farm ers on Main Street in front of St. James EVERY WEDNESDAY IN MANCHESTER the Dairy ()ueen because she ne^ed Oarvoy hat hhntoH doputteod and Church through October. petition. money and it was all she could do. aaokn ravongo on bin tormonlorn. j ’ Other dancers include Nancy (Ropaol; SO minn.) (Ctoood- IIOK i V “ It has to do with skills,”- she told CMillonad:U.S.A) Human Needs Fund: We thank Herman and Mildred Raff, also .17, Anne Marie de-Angelo, the paper in a story published Sun­ W FrloiaPrloianaws-iao gatalllls travel Service and the Munich Ballet’s Yanis day. "Besides being a mother, loports from around tho nnllon end Johnson for contributing to the MACC Human Needs m eu »y. Malar ovontn ol the day 888 MAIN STREET Fund, and thanks to John and E lvie Johnson for a dona­ Pikieris and his wife' Marielena there’s not much else that I know.” tion made in mem ory of Mrs. Esther Hanson. Mencia. jtlBM ootFotfetoiineooiPoeco 643-2168 While on the subject of human needs, many thanks to In Amorlea ‘Olylomnonlrn’ Tho Denver and the press Mnrthii Brahom Dnnoo Company Over Elaine Sweet and the Manchester Red Cross and to parformt thin bnllnl bated on ihn SO Yean Travel Experience F.I.S.H. for responding so quickly to an emergency John Denver will he guest speaker O r^ tragedy ki whioh Clyramnot- tra murdora hor huabond to romoln Authoriiud tfo n t In ' need. With support such as this from other Manchester at the Aug. 12 National Press Cluh with hor lovor. Thin oltunlo work Mincheiter (or ^ AlrUnou, Royal digs Luncheon in Washington,’ D.C. oomblnou Iho olomontn at Brook Ralliondi and Stonmshlp •• agencies and organizations it is possible to meet some of my^modorndonooindoontompor- the needs of our area families on low or fixed incomes. The British royal family is con­ Denver, an environmentalist, will icrmuolo.(BOinlnt.) ^ .. sidering the purchase of an apart­ speak on “ You And Me: A ’Transfor­ BMoula-(Hytlary)***H ” 2S Blopo" ffegg RebortBonal. Furniture Bank Match Game: A plea for patience ment in New York City that would mation of Survival.” Modololao Corrall. Atnnn booomou - please in waiting for MACC staffers to arrange a pick-up c ^ $5 million and contain 21 rooms. The songwriter-entertainer, Invotvodkikmordorandonlneonlous New York magazine reports. tpyplol.(SOmlno.) or match of donated furniture items. With the currently on a U.Si tour, recently 0:30 EROS assistance of volunteers we have been scheduling pick- The magazine, quoting an uniden- returned from a concert tour of CD(D The Thn Conway Show * ups and deliveries on Wednesday afternoons from 1 to 3. tifed source, said the ^itish royal Japan and a private visit to China. (D MaruOrlllln Buooln: Ktl Rudmtn, Burt Btohtraoh, Corolo - This schedule is loosely based on the availability of family was considering the Bayar Sagar, Holon Roddy. Bluo purchase of the apartment in Trump Oyttor CuH, Larry Brtham, John H m gooiBcIf a new FDoderoea volunteer staff. We ask prospective donors to call us a The gouletas millions Mwamer, (iharlle MoCtnki. B O DEREK week or two in advance if possible, with information on Tower,; a 68-story luxury con­ QDB Monday WsHbaaobNIOttho the item to be donated, and thank you all for your un­ dominium building on Manhattan’s American Invsco, the con­ playar'o atrlkoTn ntlll In otfoot, dominium empire built by aNornara programmlns wM nk.) ^ICHPRD HARRIS] derstanding and patience. East Side. BsOO Last Wednesday, we had the pleasure of witnessing The source quoted by New York Evangeline Gouletas-Carey, the CD ® M.A.S.H.Momboraaltho Chofiped said the royal family wanted the wife of New York Gov. Hugh Carey, 4077mtraurablatonltapwlMnll^ some more Manchester magic unfold. Our MACC sta­ mutt wranlla with tho nwairarlng tion wagon arrived at a pick-up point where a timely apartment to use during visits to and her brothers, has assets of about tummor hail nnwnllnnaknotrad “match” had been well planned (we thought)....to this country. $600 m illion, says Fortune transfer a sofa bed. Fine. Our two young volunteers magazine. PavorNa vrifa” 1B40 Cary Brant. But it also has debts o f nearly $500 Steak Burger (willing to move mountains) were struggling to fit an 8- Irana Dutura. A woman, nuppp^ly United Aititis million and may be facing tax dnad, raturna lo tha U.8. to Sod hor foot item into a 6-foot space, when, lo! down the road a hunbend remeirrad. <2 hra.) good neighbor espied our dilemma and pitched right in It’s a Job liabilities of another $40 million or BHovio-tCoaiody)** 'Wroooo idiis Salad Bar! more. . • ■My” CtM iMtwood. Soatmnn pm U KIKi: SHIIiLDS... with the offer of his truck. Off we sped to our destination ' I Vickie Daniel has been forced to Crolhora. A thoroughly nolvo totmor American Invsco, founded eight IS siz/-i.iN ~ - thanks for the donated Item and their concern and I . ' assistance. ► — feud brings junk mail Elmergency Pantry: Thanks to a highly capable JAMES BOND summer volunteer staff the pantry has been operating , 0 0 7 ^ Now Your Advertisement Will Be 5 . V wm 51 as usual supported by collections from the following So Gibbons called the Madison Playboy Club keys and pornographic GODFREY,m. (UPI) - It’s not -j. churches: ’The Social Concerns Commission of South County Sheriff’s Department. An in­ m a tei^ l. Orders were placed for 12 llquite like sbootteg at the neighbors, I ( )R ’ Z* United Methodist Church sponsored a parish collection vestigation resulted in the Indict­ collector plates at ^7.50 each, :3iot a t far as feuds go it was effec- r- of canned tuna .and protein items. Second ment last Thursday of Gibbons bleighbors also were billed for gift V O I R I M S I ^ ' Congregational Church, St. James Church and Emanuel Seen By 18,000 Households In Manchester -tlve in tta own way. neighbor, Steven C: Jones, 32, on 11 subacriptiona they never gave. w Kenneth E. Gibbons was getting Lutheran Church Women have all either donated and counts of forgery. Jones, free on AmbIU iIb ONIV ;maii — loU of mail — everyday, “ I wasn’t surprised it was Jones, ; »;;■ delivered (ood to the pantry or given a cash donation. $50,000 bond, faces up. to five years Monday thru 1 f j t ] IlmiHilftilisIs aitoat of it waa Junk mall — por­ who is the only person I ’ve ever had ’ We cannot stress strongly enotigh the Important role in prison if convicted: * FiM ivllAM todPN. nographic magazinea, collector trouble with in my life,’’ said Gib­ I : r these collections play. Many ttumks to you all. Prosecutors said Jones waa «latea, pffera ot breast-enlarging bons, a 50-year-old grandlather. Our new Ponderosa Chopped Steak engWod in a campaign of harais- Prosecutora said there were other Clothing Bank: Looking forward just a short few o 9 9 20 00 ^ t s and property in Salt Lake Q ty. Burger is USDA inspected, carefully Rn.T. T M CIrculatton Bvry W dn »dtir — At ment against Gibbons and other incidents — includtaig a dead skunk w e tte, the advent o f first daj’ of School! Needed at the P fo r nine months the niail came select^ cuts of beef, including Strip nUghbors because of a feud that found in a' w ell - r but no charges nothing Bank at this point; Corduroy trousers, shirts, ra A It hain’t etopped yet. steak and Ribeye steak. MURRAY started in 1977 about a property were filed involving those. I Appllctblu IA>n not UwluOad {■ .“ We got ebout 90 percent of every M nM - IN IHMN Mml loUiri - N IN sneakers and shoes in school age sIz m . Donated Items easement. , ' ' At pAillcIpAIIng SMAktiouMa. itoeiaulne ever publiahed,” said Oib- . t l think about 90'percent o f what should be clean and ready to wear. It would be extreme- Jones allegedly filled out more USDA Intpuclud 100% Choopod Call 643-2711 — “We alw |ot offers for goes into the mail ia junk,’ ’ laid Gib­ BooISluik. i V ly belpf"! if footwear donations can be marked with size than too subscription cards bi the SSuViobnit-l •liMpital equiwppnt. burglw alarm eiMt PonduroH SyUum. mo. i ' ' inside. For items delivered to the aothlng Bank and to names of neighbors, and police were bons. “ We returned some of it a ^ ^eMbRnentrumtinum nding, en- refused delivery on otber items.” • the MACC office, we would like to thank Ann Smith, able to track him down through the (MNMhBiMMMablMl) K ® Lcyckvediai, record clubs, book Gibbons said the worst was the Mrs. Boleo and five anonymous donors. orighial requests. 'CiQABu The neighborhood was goon pornographic material. Introducing Something New: We are pleased to an­ f “It'a beM going on for about nine “ It was pretty ipapbic stuff,” he PLEAaECMi.iwanE Imontha. it’s atill going on. It hasn’t plagued by calls from salesmen, nounce our participation in ’The Community Service book club memberships, magazines. said. “ We returned it all.” HuiaciaBtma r Restitution Program, through the Voluntary Action dbiku Irealiy tapered off.” Center. Volunteers from within the Manchester area PEANUTS — C h f I— M. Schulz THE HERALD, Mon., Aug. 3, 1981 - 19 e « i u 1 8 - THE HERALD. Mon.. Aug. S. 1961 MEV; MANAGER, YOU T H A rs PRETTY 600P.. mbur WHAT IF YOU WERE ON UW/n A SEE SOME REAL ACROSS DOWN . Answer to Previous Puzzle ^ r t h d a y BASEBALL BUBBLE 6UM A SOCCER TEAM? BL0UHN6?U)MiCHTHI5... 1 Pussy cat 1 Destroyed 6 Anu s 2 Palestine O neighbor 3 Briitly t r y to 0M out and movs 11 Dustier 4 Soft metal Area towns around aa much as poaalbla 13 Sign of the 5 Still this coming yOar. Qo to now 6 Actress Novak ptaeas whsra you can mast zodiec 14 Quickly 7 Same (prefix) others. You could mako soma 8 Point tallier vary*^ fortunats contacts. 15 Dolce 16 Egypt (ebbr.) 9 Simple iugar C o v e n try LIO (M y n t D on't 10 Remains Bolton / diaoountI a Idsas you 17 Towel I today. PRISCILLA'S POP — Ed Sullivan 19 Fish eggs 12 Lavers ^ ba a trHls orandloaa to 20 Watch over 13 Extrasensory JU S T O NCE " I N S T E A P IF M V U F E M R B A U V IN G IS A OONSTANT STUARTS DEPRESSIONS others. They may be big tor 22 Bag 18 Betrayer (si.) O FB E IK K S PLATE OF FRENCH STRUQSUE.'WHV ALMMVS MAKE ME them, but not lor you. r p U K E T O 23 Not as much 21 Bores FRIES, TWE WORLP CANT IT EVER BE A „ HUNGRV.' ,----^ wds.) 41 Try Romanos, travel, luck, BE T H E WSr T R E A T E P 24 Early stringed 23 Public hall fseouroee, possible pHlaSe tn l WOULP BEON A E C E O F I ^ K E ? 3S Mayday signal 43 Bore One incumbent on slate C H E E E e U K E A instrument 25 Son of career tor the ooming months 37 Red round 48 Oklahoma A N O U N P CRUMB.' —T P IE T .' 26 They exist Aphrodite ere a l dieoueeed In your A stro- 27 Resound vegetable town Qnph whtoh begins with your HERE'", (contr.) bbthday. MaS IV tor MOh to 28 One ol the 29 Eternal 38 Keyboard 49 Math symbol Aatot-draph, Box 499, Radio, Gershwins 33 South Dakota instrument 51 Before (prefix) city a t^ Station, N.Y, 10019. Be 30 Commerce 39 Viper 52 Lip Republicans vying for Tbwn Council sure to spaoHy M rlh dale. agency(ebbr) 34 Instigate (2 j . « B e|W .«N Y our 31 Piece of a tree 1 3 3 4 5 e 7 9 9 10 proepeots are very trunk protweatg both today and A-. 32 What (It.) n 12 13 COVENTRY — Republicans are tomorrtar. However, don’t put 33 Beats on unis manana that whtoh you 14 IS backing one incumbent, one veteran take oareol now. . 6-S 36 Ins and _____ and three newcomers for the Town UBRA (Beiil. SO-Oet. 1 9 ) 39 AHacted 11 17 18 18 manner Council in the November election. TNnge aiiouid work out vary CAPTAIN f AtY — Croolta A Lawrence ■ tortunaiely today, oepaoiaSy In 40 HomeSite 20 22 Council Chairwoman Roberta 42 Sulk . matters vMiore you, are Involved A5THB CRIW OF THB AWBreRV 9HIP SBARCHBS FOR r I THINK OUR ONLY t WOULDN'T BB 90 CERTAIN t P27 Koontz was nominated Wednesday 34 z. ' with, persons who Iteve helped . . R49y AMP ANSBLA..., l c h a n c b B T o s m y 44 Degree (ebbr.) 1 at the party’s caucus, though she you In the p a s t A. Pirn AkieeLA' 45 Comptst ■ 30 21 Z. said two weeks before she did not in­ BCfim O (Dot H Wee. If) point OsMie your energlee now to ■ tend to run again. She said she had BVBRVTHINe 46 Actress 31 hdMng your escral ambWon. '^■ApylLETIPOBr Farrow received support from townspeople The breaks are going to start THAT WAS LOST 33 34 35 37 39 M THB BBRMUPA ^ U T OF MBRBi 47 Feare 1 and pressure from the town com­ ooming your way, but keep rglANBLB MUBTYB SO Letpl ■ 43 them to yourself. 39 xo mittee to run. .BBENWdOMKBy 53 Wears away Robert E. Olmstead was also BAOmARHIB (Nee. »Oee. 54 Mora banal X. 11) You haw soma apdeW , THAT lO N IZB Rt 44 xs 11 nominated from the floor at the 55 Pertaining to knoededge or axpartlso yoii 48 49 BO SI ■52 47 caucus. He served on the council for 'can uWtae now to bensRt your- • kidney 1 1 one term in the mid-1970's. saH as waM as others. Outlels 56 Behave S4 thaatrIcallY S3 Rounding out the candidates for may be found today. the seven-member council are CAPlWCOIW (Dee. IM a ii. 19) $S 58 Francis A.' Perrotti William H. Robert E. Olmstead You are In an axoeHent W illiam H. Paton Jr., J. Donald J. Donald Edwards Roberta E. Koontz aohlavnment cycle, so don't |NfWSFAFIR (NTfRFRISf ASSN | Eklwards and Francis A. Perrotti. waste your ettorte on goale of Also active in the Republican He is director of the Coventry West Hartford. smaS ooneequenoe. Bigness Is a l l e y OOP — PavB Orau# tion chief in the Yale Medical representatives to the district Town Committee, he received his Youth Soccer Association, and has He has a bachelor’s degree from wad within your range. GADFRYI I -JUST Public Health Nursing Association A4MIAIIIUB (Jew. l i Peb. 19) NOOKITTH’ \VVHATAMAGNIH-//W,MANl>jyy SEE 1M? AH’LL SAY AH O U R BOARDING HOUSE Koontz Center. B.A. from Eastern Connecticut been active in the Recreation Com­ the University of Maine, and a GOT T'FIND OL' and to the Board of Homemakers. The Impression you mako . « z E ofmETjemtr b e a s t i w e ( n o rr h a f t a SSDTM ! HBWENTTHKT- She received her B.S. and mission. He has also been the town’s masters from the University of A-WW...WEAR1N’ M M t DINtTY BETORE V / IW ^ SREAT Roberta E. Koontz is running for A Korean veteran, Edwards State College and his master’s today wW be both lasting and BABY/ MUST CAPTURE TTl \ ANYBOOY ELSE assoicate’s degree from Quinniplac assistant comqjissloner of baseball. favnrehle. Where you reedy CLEAN WDRSH ARIXMD MOVIE.' rV E ' her third consecutive term on the studied political science at the degree from University of Connec­ Hartford. HUWU1HLESS POES! College, and her masters from He studied and received an un­ Olmstead was chairman of the aMno Is In one-on-one telallon- BEEN 7WTOM Town Council. She is chairwoman, University of Vermont. ticut. NBCKI UO)nn. She also spent a summer dergraduate degree from Bates most recent Charter Revision Com­ ahtoe. THREE T im e * and has lived on Hemlock Lane for Perrotti has also been active in F i B b b IH b . m iaioh 19) studying art and architecture at the mission, and has served in various BEFORE BUT all 14 of her years in Coventry. the town’s baseball program. College. Lady Luck wW be doing her University of Valencia, Spain. Perrotti capacities for the Republican Town best today to develop new I* T ILL ' ‘ Active in the Republican Town BNJOVEP Committee. channels to meet your needs Committee, Mrs. Koontz also Edwards Francis A. Perrotti, 54, Is running Paton Olmstead and wants. She’d appreciate a served as secretary to the Conserva­ for his first term on the 'Town Coun­ Bom in New York City and riised iMipIng hand from you, howSv- in Maine, Olmstead has been active tion Commission. She was involved J. Donald Eklwards, 46, moved cil. He is principal of the Mansfield William H. Paton Jr., 34, is run­ Robert E. Olmstead, 49, is seeking . or. with the First Congregational AHBB (Mareh 91-Aptl 19) in a two-year study of water quality from Manchester to Coventry 12 Middle School in Mansfield. ning for,his first term on the town a second term on the Town Council. Church throughout his years in Much good can ooma your way in Coventry Lake in the early 1970’s. years ago and lives oh Grant Hill Perrotti last year ran un­ He served as s e c r e t ^ on the board Council. Coventry. He Is on the Board of today through showing a wdl- The life long Connecticut resident Road. successfully against Democrat Mike He has lived in Coventry for nine between 1975 and 1977. Ingnsee to bo ooopsrailw. Trustees there. is an associate professor of Botany Bom it) Montreal, Edwards is a Helfgott for state representative of years on South Street. He has lived on Ripley Hill Road Tlunk In terms of what la beet All four of his children went tor others, as wad as yourealf. at the West Hartford branch of the naturalized citizen making his first the 53rd district. He plans to run Paton is a researcher for the AM F for the past 17 years, and teaches PRANK AND M N KST •-p Dob ThavBB through the Coventry school system. TAUNUB (A ^ Idddsy 19) University of Connecticut, and has run for the Town Council. again next year. Cuno Co. in Meriden. science at Conard High School in TM s Is a good day to la k e care aspirations to run for the Second He has lived at 12 Boston Turnpike Hew was active for several years of those numerous choree — ^------W Congressional District seat. on the Public Health Nursing Agen­ for the past 30 years. around the house you've want­ She retains a license as a medical Perrotti is currently serving a ed to attend to. You'd be Y o u i n P l C T " 0 cy Inc., and was president when the pleased by your aooompdsh- J000IN6 technologist. A member of the town organization dissolved last term on the Board o f Education, and ‘ mants. •n4 American Society of Clinical year. has been a member of the Zoning Officials fear strike O D M I (Idsy 11-M w 10) Your T O t u r n 8 A iC#* V Pathologists, she worked as a sec- He is now one of the town's board of Appeals. optimistic attitude and Tttt d-ocl* \ EXERCISE demaener today wdl greatly V/)(0 onhanoe your populanty. Olh- erswWbedrawntgyou.oape- w i T H O u r A P E W PATH W IT H Body found dady mambara of the oppoello H IM * e-3 f t O r i s w ePF. ayNBAirc.TWReg U9 FW ATM Ok NO RW ALK (U P I) - An autopsy endangers company CM4C8R (June 91-My 99) was planned today in the death of an You’re luoklasi today In finan­ \ A - unidentified young woman whose its "Brass City” nickname, cial waas and In sHuatlons KIT ‘N’ CAR LYLE — Lnriy Wriaht WATERBURY (UPI) — A strike The commissioner said the out­ where you are trying to do badly decomposed body was found “ There’s a great possibility this < ©ldP9yl«AbW..TIIReg U9 Pm.9TMO* by 1;300 workers at Century Brass look was grim but he was willing to eometWng worthwhile to r fami­ at a commuter parking lot off Route company won’t exist in Waterbury I Products Inc. entered its third day hold another bargaining session "if ly members or reletlvee. 123. very long,” said Santaguida, a THE BORN LOSER — Art Sanedni today with state and company of­ either o f the pai^es calls up and ------.. State police sought help from the former state labor commissioner ficials warning the walkout could suggests we take one last shot public in identifying the young and UAW official. “ This strike could AW,I'MI jOOWM& Zi^iPTbUTKY drive the financially troubled firm before the company shuts down." Q D eO JITi woman, described as white, aged 18 very possibly be the death knell for out of business. About 1,300 workers picketed the iO K X 0 l fORAUlWRPlIO to 25, about 5-foot-4, and a brunette. Century andithe union knows that.” NO RTH l- M l A state-backed effort to resolve plant Sunday, but union officials Her clothed body was found in the Century bought the sprawling ♦ Kl04 THBWaiOMARV the dispute failed Sunday after more said that number would be in­ YK64 pre-dawn hours Saturday after Hamilton Avenue plant from Scovill than 12 hours of indirect bargaining creased substantially today with 9K65 polled received a call from an Manufacturing Inc. in 1976 and has and officials of United Auto Workers possibly all of the 1,300 striking N AQJIOS anonymous motorist who spotted suffered "substantial” financial Local 1604 said mass picketing workers taking to the lines. W EST B AST the body. losses over the past three years, would begin at the plant today. Sunday’s bargaining session ran ♦ Q im t P6 Dr. Catherine Galvin, chief state Santaguida said. A union spokesman said he did not from 10 a.m. until after 11 p.m. as w----- Y im T it t medical examiner, estimated the "W e’ve been hurt very hard and know if additional talks had been Peraro and mediators shuttled • Jlltift 94 woman died two to five weeks ago. ourfinancial position at the moment B K B tS S l . scheduled between the union and between separate meetings of union An autopsy was scheduled at is very bad,” he said Saturday. (jentury, which is.the last of Water- and company officials. SOUTH Galvin’s office in Farmington. The UAW local struck at midnight 9AJ9 0 4 bury’s large brass mills and one of Gov. W illiam O’Neill had urged A trooper at the Westport Friday when its three-year contract YAQ J the city’s Largest employers. Peraro to set up the session because barracks said the body was so badly with the metal manufacturer ♦ AQ3 WINTHROP — Dick C b v b III Labor Commissioner P. Joseph the 1,300 union and 700 supervisory decomposed that “ it was almost a expired. The workers had rejected a BA974 Peraro said it was likely the strike and management jobs at stake in the skeleton.” management offer Friday afternoon Vulnowbte: Both T REST would shut down the plant. A com­ dispute “are a vital part of the IT FURTHERMORE. 'rCU LACK ANY She was wearing designer jeans before voting to strike. D o a le r. South MV pany official said corporate officers economic base of Waterbury,” a veerkSE of CRBATiviTy and a red vest over a strapless terry Santaguida said the firm had CASE. would meet today to discuss liquida­ spokesman for O’Neill said. Weal North E ast S M ih OR IMA6HNATION. cloth tube top, police said. proposed a contract package that in­ SNT tion of the manufacturer. Century spokesman Frank San- cluded a cost of living adjustment i^Ms ( N T Pass Pam “ At this point it appears as though taguida warned that failure to and a profit sharing plan, but “ no P u e g*3 the company is going to initiate resolve the strike could mean an end necessary action to liquidate the to the company and the local in­ wage increases.” dustry for which Waterbury earned Opening lead:9J Woman stable operaton,” Peraro said. Oi«lbyMA.Inc. 3 . BLO O M FIELD (U P I) - A Bloom­ field woman was hospitalized in jj/fl stable condition today with gunshot ItaOawaM Jacoby ______PO= HUGS BUNNY — Helmdahl & StoHel wounds she sustained in a weekend Lawyer who cut fees ■ad AlaaSoaUg V THD. COVlimiY.CONI LOT. ^ CAM BeutVt 1t N 6l0ld. on Captain John Duzik and tried to amimibioos Coast Guard plane was out Now Smith plan a ^ who held up the Bridgewater branch and Meridm was clos^ and the phone dlsconnMted. 7 4 t-7 4 M “ and Wsat shows out W m take control o f the Corpus Christi, dispatched to the scene. T h e ship PMLLCD OTN KVHJKOKVF KLH o f the N ew M ilford Savings Bank headed for land with the plane “ I think he failed to realise he had se: .ous problems, "releli For OurjUfoMT^ielmy" South plays a heart West —trri ^ Texas-based ship. about 10:20 a.m. Friday. sidd Dunn, “ 'ih say he Just couldn't do it (the w ork) was StoSa SuTlmmatotaly, w The vessel, dragging for scallops monitoring its progress. Waat ataitad with six sp ate RMBHC.” —JKCDDC CEEKTLL -Police said the pair ditched one 'The (Corpus Christi, TeMS-basM . unacceptable.” in the fertile Georges Bank fishing tlx diemends and one dab. getaway car about a half mile away vessel was met at the entrance to Comptainta logged so far Involve 34 divorces, seven grounds, had gone several days East has only one spade so LOEOCMB in New Milford, where Ms. Findlay Nantucket Sound by the CkWSt Guard real estate doings, two cases each of bankruptcy, in­ without bringing in a good catch, but wiisasaw spwi»Maiiitw SeuUi cM te hto wadt a j» PREVIOUS 80LUTION:''l don't mind living In a man's world u ‘ ) ' allegedly was waiting in a second cutter Point Turner’and escorted to corporation and name changes, one will and one and ■ flnasaas fW ^ e a t a Duzik refused to leave the area, a IX O IFT OUkirNS long a t I can bo a woman In It.” — Marilyn Monroa ' ' ear to aid their escape. ’The men New Bedford early Sunday where c r in ^ I case. StaU had testuied he had another 30 qasen - with , certainty . of spokesman said. N O W TH RU BAT,, AUfl|. M i w ere being sought by police. FBI agents Were waiting to in­ cases outstanding. ‘^Things kind o f simmered and g m m i m ■NIlRPIUHi ASSN.) ..TMopers said the two bandits vestigate the incident. Brian Mahon, head of the Meriden ,• Walllngford- V \ never Showed any weapons but were came to a head,” said Coast Guard Southingtm chapter Of the (tonnectlcut Bar Associa­ twiieved to have been armed. Petty Officer Jack Mason. "A t first ( ■ ■ ,' THE HERALD. Mon., Aug. 3. 1981 - 21 2 0 - THE HERALD. Mon.. Aug. 8. 1861 . T

■ .‘i* '7 ‘ Sign in Manchester shop C lassified

/ 1 'Old qul iters never die - just go to pieces Just what is it? intricate designs. teaches, quilting and rag doll­ She and her sister are in the "The quilt-as-you-go technique, She thinks the only reason the an- { By Barbara Richmond process of finishing them now. Of which involves making a qnllt, tique quilts were made by hand was • Herald Reporter Pat McNally, who learned to quilt making. ' Arguments (politely concealed but still arguments) easy explanation. Tlie total of Ml plus is much larger, much more in­ Pat’s mother had started to make course in IMS there were only 4S square-by-square, is perhaps the because the women didn’t have | when she was a young girl by best method for today’s women wto sewing machiites in those days. “I j about the huge U.S.'money supply and tesulUtM soaring MeAoney, - In the minds of other millions more clusive, and a much more accurate measure of the supp­ "You cut a piece of material up watching her mother do it, said her J ‘ai and her sister each a quilt made states. But Pat’s sister found the U.S. interest rttos dominated toe. recent Ottawa con­ same squares In a shop recently and don’t have the time, nor the room, to believe anything you can do by | sophisticated in financial jargon, includes not only cash ly of money in the U.S. now, go on to: I into pieces and then sew them back husband has that definition for up of squares representing the ference of the world’s major Indnstriallaed uthm s In our possessions but also deposits in banks that can be Ml-B: This Includes the two measures above, plus: states. She started the quilt in IMS so got them each the other two work on a big frame. In the quilt-aa-. m achine- do it. The quilting i t s ^ | Your “ I together again,” and that’s how quilting. you-go method, the busy person can has to be done by haiijl though,” she | at which our P r m m t Reaipin w u introduced to his withdrawn and transformed into currency on our de­ demand deposits of domestic branches of foreign banks, I some men describe the art of Pat, who owns and operates the and after she died, Pat’s father states which they’ll nnake up into take a square to work, ormeetings said. I feUdw leaders. Ups and dowu In toe UJ3. money supply, Noney'fi mand, via the writing of a check. Once more, too sim- and AT’S accounts (automated transaction system ac­ I quilting. That may be so — but the "Calico Patch” a shop in one of the found the squares and gave them to pillows'to go with.the quilts. usually running into billiou a week, now tnake big ple. counts). But It EXCLUDES savings deposits at banks. Pat said she’s been doing quilting pr wherever, and work on it easily. I pieces are put back together to form oid Cheney Mills on Pine Street, now his daughters. Mrs. McNally said that in the Another method of quiliiiig is | headlinu on the financial pages and even r u d i the Worth So? So, below are the definitions of the "ihoney By that exclusion, this measure shrinks in comparison seriously for about eight years and tying. In this method tbS squares ■ / "olden days” the women used to front pagu u weU u TV Sylvia Porter supply” as of early August 1981 — and I’ll wager to Ml plus. But it is a refinement which, added to the she’s been teaching for five years at are nude and the batting pot in and | Interest rates respond at once to the money supply other measures, gives our monetary authorities a the Manchester Rec where she also have hooks and eyes on'the ceiling countless numbers of you have hoped someone, then a piece of yam dr something j totals toe Federal Reserve Bank of New York rrieasra somewhere would give you precisely this guide. clearer understanding of the money supply. /-■V- teaches how to make rag dolls. with the big quilting frame at­ tached. The whole frame could be' similar is used to tie through each j fronp its stronipiold at 38 Liberty 8t. InNeW York City qt- - Ml: This is the total most frequently reported In the TTiere are two more measures, both called Ml-B adj. She said quilting if reaUy catching square. This is prpbably the fastest j a nedfied minute u e h Thursday afternoon. In finan­ . news flashes Tliursday afternoon from New York and is The significance of the latest, added this past June, is on and it's nice to wrap yourself up pulled up to the ceiling when not in use. method. I cial Centers around toe world, the figuru are awaited the most basic measures of money in our nation. (M that it Includes non-bank traveler's checks, certainly in one in the winter wh«i the ther­ with anxiety. The “money supply” and Interest rate stands for Money, of course.) If includes all currency in totaling billions in our era. And there will be still more mostats are set at 60. She said quilters disagree about Calling attention to some of ,the {• the type of material to use. Some antique quilts, Afrs. McNally said | levels are actually becoming accepted (oplu at social circulation (the coins in your pocket, bills in your definitions, says Salomon Brothers’ Henry Kaufman, as "You don’t have to make a quilt to parties. wallet, currency in a strongbox at home or safety the Federal Reserve System pursues “the elusive con- learn quilting,” she said. She said believe 100 percent cotton is the only you can see that the women didn’t ! The money supply? What is toe money supply? deposit box at a bank) and it also includes all demand , cept of money.” many people are awed by the kind to use. And some believe in waste one bit of cloth because they | Interest rates souing because the money supply uchange, especially as Issued by a government or deposits at U.S. banks (meaning money deposited at Tomorrow: The “log c” of the bigger thequpply, the th o u ^ t of nnaking a big quilt so they using polyester blends. Of course have been pieced other than tor the j baUoou? What sense dou that make? y authorized public authority.” Obviously what the banks which can indeed be withdrawn on demand by higher the cost. can make other quilt^ things such the antique quilts were ail cotton Pattern. She said people making | Since when is it logieal for the cost of a commodity governments of the world’s'industrialized nations and because that’s the only thing they quilts nowadays won’t do ,that. j writing a check). (Job hunting? Sylvia Porter’s comprehensive new 32- as pillows, potholders, pocketbooks, (money) to rates sharply beuuse the supply of that toe securitlu markets are referring to goes well beyond ’This is merely the beginninj, however. Thus, go on page booklet “How to Get a Better Job” gives up-to- children’s clothes and other smaller had. She said those quilts are stan­ “We’re a wasteful society,” she | commodity incredsu? Is it not simple oommon sense to this definiUon. to: date information on today’s job market and how to take items that make nice personal gifts. ding up but there’s no way to know commented. j Money, in the minds of millions of Americans, is the yet how the polyester blend willhoM I «xpect that the bigger toe supply of aproduct, the.less it Ml plus: ’This is the total of Ml, detailed above, plus: advantage of it. Send $1.95 plus 50 cents for postage and Pat said she thinks the part she will cost -r- and the smaller the s i^ iy *>f that product, cash in our pockets or wallets (coins or bills). Again ob­ savings deposits at commercial banks; NOW accounts handling to “How to Get a Better Job,” in care of this enjoys most about teaching is seeing up so or 100 years from now. She takes orders for quilts and one I "If I see a print I like I don’t care woman ordered a baby criA quilt I the more expensive will be its price? viously, what is being debated so furiously (and at banks and thr ft institutions; demand deposits at newspaper, 4400 Johnson Dr., Fairway, Kan. 66205). the look of satisfaction on a pupil’s Money,' uys my dlctloury, is “any medium of “furiously” Is not an exaggeration) gou far beyond that mutual savings banks, and credit union share drafts. Copyright 1981 Universal Press Syndicate face when they see they can really whether it’s cotton or polyester that she was sending to Germany.! do it. blend. There are some people, who Besides the quilts and dolls, which j There are many methods of would dnke me for saying that,*’ are her real specialty, Mrs. McNal-1 quilting. There’s applique, which is she added. ly also makes, by Special order,] one piece of fabric applied to Cotton batting is out because It ringbearer pillows for weddings. ' Records loss Unemployment another; trepunto, which is stuffing disintegrates with wasjiing, she In her shop that features bolts and the desifpi to raise it; piecing, which said. They have batting now that is bolts of calico material, quilt means cutting material up and put­ pArt polyester and aim iambswool patterns. lted sunsuits, dolls, ■ GREENWICH (UPI) — Plttston Co. h u reported ting it back together in a design; and which is super warm. ^ ban^ngs aiid other | a preliminary n etlo u of $37.4 mllUon, or I t cents stringwork, which is callpd log Mrs. McNally doesn’t have any r Mwing accessories, is a sign that | per share, for toe seOood quarter of U61. cabin, and U strips of material put qualms either about doing as.mudi reads, “Old quilters never die — | Second quarter net incornp last y e u w u |34.8 in Manchester together in a design. of the work by machine aS possible. They just go to pieceS.”< ■ | million, or 86 cents per share, the company u id Thursday. Net sidu and operating revenues fop this year’s second quarter were tl» .9 milUoa, compared to I4M.7 nulllM for the same p^od lu t yeu. For toe six months ending June 30, the company jumps to 5. 6% reported a net lou of |10.6 mllUon, or 38 cents per share, compared with a net income of |45.4 mUUon, or 11.31 per Share, a year euU u. Unemployment in Manchester jumped Labor Department reported. from 4.6 percent in May to 5.6 percent in Each of the 16 labor market areas had Net rates and operating revennu for the first six . a monthly increase in unemployment. months were fl.l n ^ o n , compared with f l mUUon June, according to figures released by the (Connecticut Labor Department. Included in the unemployment estimate a year ago. - were those people receiving unemploy­ Thisi y e u ’s net lou w u attributed to the 73-day There were 26,250 people working in non-agricultural jobs in Manchester in ment benefits, others who were ineligi­ strike by toe United BOne Workers. The company ble or whose benefits had expired and raid the strike “Impacted coal production and sa lu June and 1,571 were out of work, the Labor Department reported. jobseekers entering or re-entering the into mid-June.” labor force, the state said. Pittshm is a diversified company with interests Andover’s unemployment dropped from 7.8 percent in May to 7 percent in Manufacturing output also advanced in in mining and marketing of bitumlnou coal,.toe June, and there was improvement in the marketing and distribution of fuel oU, Briiik’s June, the department said. There were 1,108 people employed in non- manufacturing new hire rate and security transportation servicu and warehousing automobile registrations. An increase in and distribution servicu. agricultural work in Andover in June, while 84 were unemployed, the state initial filings for unemployment benefits reported. was also reported. Bolton’s unemployment rose from 3.9 Income up percent in May to 4.6 percent in June. There were 2,141 people working in non- Labor study TRUMBULL (UPI) - Raybestoo-Blanhattan Inc. agricultural jobs in Bolton in June and b u reported net Income of $1.83 mUllon for the se­ 104 without work. cond quarter of 1981 and firsttoalf net income of Coventry had a June unemployment courses set $3.88 mUUon. rate of 5.6 percent, up from 4.3 percent in STORRS — The University of Connec­ The company’s second-quarter net income May. There were 4,467 employed in non- ticut will offer three labor studies uresented 71 cents p u share, which compared to agricultural work in Coventry in June courses at two locations this fall, a loss of $1.73 mllUon or 78 cents a share during the and 267 were unemployed, the state said. focusing on collective bargaining, union second quarter of 1980. Statewide, employment, personal in­ government and labor problems. Net sales for toe second quarter increased 37 pu - come and average weekly wages in­ The courses, which will be offered at cent from toe comparable ^riod of 1980 wfaUe m u creased to record levels in Connecticut the UConn West Hartford campus and at for the first half of this yeu were up 13 percent in June, according to the department. the Stamford campus, are open to in­ from the first haU of I960. Seasonally adjusted erhployment rose terested persons on a non-degree, non­ "This substantia) improvement in o u opuating one-tenth of a percent in June, the matriculating basis, as well as to per­ results is fnrtou indluUon that ou profit improve­ highest in state history, the Labor sons seeking academic credit in the ment programs are working, Frederick J. Ross, the Department said. Bachelor of General Studies program. company’s president and chief executive officu, ’Tl»re were 1, 450,600 people working They are presented by the Office of u id Thursday. in non-agricultural jobs in June, the Credit Programs, Division of Extended He noted thatased sub­ 8 percent in the hourly rate since Jjine Classes will meet at 7 p.m. and breadth of feelings. Pain, grief, joy, empathy, still cast In the traditional mold. share, compared with- M17.3 mllUon test yeu. sidiary, Pteneer Parachute Co. be done here rather than in California 1960, according to state figures. Wednesdays at the UConn/StamfOrd vulnerable experience a person can have — or the most person’s; development. It can be used to create good Operating revenuu totaled $4X88 billion, compared because the BfanchesteT company has a pathos. rewarding. perceptions of the world. In i m . Sen. Edmund S. Muskto., D - ! ^ e ., and the Some of the equipment and aircraft Highest hourly wages were paid in the branch on Schofieldtown Road, starting to $3.06 union, featured at toe centers will be manufac­ large engineering staff and fabric labor market areas of Bristol, Ansonia, Sept. 2. From the beginning of life to the end, we often have Some people are afraid that once crying begins It will “As a child gets older,” says Metzger, "crying Is still ■ leading candldateTor president, ww widely reported to Xerox said its prevlou quarterly record net in- reason to cry. It is release, catharsis, the end of con­ be difficult to stop. Others fear that their friends will have cried during a press .conference In New tured at Pteneer Parachute. The new manufacturing facilities, Hartford and Bliddletown, all of which Registration and fee information may a signal of dlstren,.but it also determines other feelings conM w u test y e u ’s secondHinaiter figure of f l i g h t Designs in California will make flict, the balm for pain in this “vale of tears.” misunderstand their crying and their problems will only Hampshire, Just before that., ptate’s presidential line of products, to be Introduced later reported averages exceeding $8 hourly. be obtained by calling UConn/West Hart­ like shame, lack of love, disappointment:” $170.9 mUUon, whldi helped rat toe oompuy’s a motorized hang glider, which Yet, we are embarrassed by tears. Crying is a sign of be Increased. These people think the only answer is to “Whether cryliM Is good or not — In this early s t w of prlmwy. The Manchester Union-Leader had printed an this year, will mean the addition of about Unemployment in Connecticut in­ ford at 523-4841, for the courses offered prevlou six-month record net Inoome of $317.X Bohjallan calls an “interim vehicle,” a weakness, the ultinute shame. suppress the urge to cry. development — depera on whidi emotions are betngt unOattMlng story about Jane Muskto and the senaUw 35 Jobs, he said. creased in June and, when seasonally at the West hartford campus, and 323- mUUon. cross between a hang glider and an ultra In Shakespeare’s ‘‘King Lear” we witness a "To some people crying means that you are out of con­ diadiarged, pnd the effectlveneu of the people m m a w tt respoMHng to the story. Muskle, standing on a adjusted, was 5.9 percent, compared to 3466 for the courses offered at the Staih- characteristic expression of thls'predomlnate belief. We flatbed truck, spoke in clearto emotional toUM about the Last yeu’s fowtlKiuartor revenu of $3X38 Sportaire Inc., Pioneer's new division, liitot aircraft. the national figure of 7.3 percent, the ford campus. trol,” she says. “In counseling drug patients we tell ns a t the time. If It Is caused by grief — that Is the Im has slroady begun searching for sites for view the pride of a mythical Anglo-Saxon King who has of a loved one — crying can be thm putlc. On the other bUUon w u Xerox's prevlou record - qqartuly them that crying helps a person get in touch with past attack on ^ wife. But did he cry? revenue figure. The prevlou six-ti revenue iln"sport air canters” and probaUy wiU given away his kingdom and is then betrayed by his own experiences — experiences that are burled deep In the hand If It Is associated with shame or caused by shame. ' Regardtou of whether Muskle did or did not cry (and record w u $3.8$8 billion during the fi (monfhs estahlirii,the first one on the west coast dau^ters. Nonetheless, at his life’s lowest point, he subconscious. Crying also creates a bonding, and a It can be bad.” Metsaer savs. most witnessu ndw agree that he did not) the puWc’s of 1980, Xerox said. within six imnths, he said. CONN SAVE enters new phase stands before us and says: closeness that Is Important In drug therapy. I have “By the time you get to adulthood, c ^ MW ,*> reaction to the re p q rt& t be crtod w u overwhahningly Tbl cenUnre will o fte facilities for noticed that observers, at group sessions, tend to associated with many Intenud emotions,” Blether “No, I’ll not weep: negaUve. There la lltUe disagreement that toe reported Bkydiving, hang gjlding aind flying ul­ WB^nSRSFIELD - CONN SAVE, trained energy^nperts. to actually get improvements made so I have full cause of weeping, but this heart become warm and compassionate when a person begins MVS. * Inddent hurt the Muskto campal^. tralight aircraft (motorUsd craft under The non-profit partnership, of electric that when winter comet, they'll feel the DK Peter Kelly, another Portland, Malite, psy­ Declares dividend Coonwticut’s nonprofit home energy Shall break into a hundred thousand flaws to cry. According to Portland, Mafne, lawyer ChaHes 168 lbs.), according to BohJalian. Even­ odnsorvation program, turns the corner and gas utilities is su|q>Iying CONN difference in comfort anAsee the change Or ere I’ll weep. O fool! I shall go mad.” “Some clients use crying as a game or distraction. chiatrist, u y s It Is Importarit to consider r ^ t happens Micoluu, a Muskto aide at the time, the public’s at- tually. hot air balloons may also be SAVE door and window d m te to Blaster in energy usage,” said Robert L. Klein, Except for the strong, iambic Shakespearean poetry, to a persons who dou not cry, a person who repressu GREENWICH (U|>I) - Dynamks Corp. qf f ro n t^ M one to phase two of its public They can cry and avoid haying to deal with ppople‘s tltudu toward men crying have apparenUy Improved, if ‘avaitehle, be said. infoi^tion campaign. List dealers to call attention to their par­ CONN SAVE executive director. the lines are barely distinguishable from views anger and try to elicit sympiathy from the group. This crying or the need to cry. only slightly. ' Amertea b u declared a reguter semlannul divi­ Existing aerial recreation centers ticipation in the program. The state has signed up over 300 expressed today by people who will not or cannot cry ^‘It doM good to let the sadneu out. To keep such dend of TVS cents n u share, TUi month,. audited households are kind of cryiiig has no value,” says Ms. Ritdile. offer either ikydiving or ultralight air-, bpiat reminded teat “Thte Is The “We’re well on our way to achieving suppliers, lenders and installers who because crying I* *■) expression of emotion suitable only Crying, say experts, is an infsnt’s first act of com­ feelings In can toad to depression,” Kelly says. “Badr In 1973 it w u not OK for a presidential can­ ' Andrew. LosyUal, chairman of the board and have agrred follow the strict stan­ didate to cry. Years later it w u OK for Jimmy Carter did t, be said, but not both- 1 )1110!” to do the enerD-uving lobs our first year of 40,000 ConnectiMt to for women and children. munication, their first message to the outside world. It , Experts agree tjuit crying Is an essential espertonce president, said Thursday the dividend wudaelarad' audits. What really counts, though, la the dards set by the federal Department ot to cry and now It’s OK for Ronald Reagan to cry,” u y s I payable on Sept. 1 to hUdets of record ha of toe Bani«Hee said Sportaire Inc. would recoinmended in their (X)NN SAVE But our crying, or inability to cry, or refusal to cry Is in infancy thqt our Ideas on crylhg begin to take that allows emotions to drain off. Modern p^chlatiy, teiw toe a fe u to franchises that would implementation of suggestions from Energy for materials and workmanship. however, WM not the flrst branch of knowledge to dis­ Mtoaleau. I close of business on Aug. 17. hoDM^nergy audito. Over 83,000 homes can strongly affect our mental health. Moreover, the shape. ttte aircraft and equipment- made In have had an audit done by (X>NN SAVE’s eachaudit. We wanttoonoouragoiMMpte ability to respond positively to the tears of others may According to Carl D. Metzger, a Portland, Maine, psy­ cover the theraputic value of crying. 'i* i| < 4 -

j'T , THE HERALD. Mon., Aug. 2,1961 - ZX 2a — THE HEHALD. Hon.. Am . 8. U>|

C lassified iJm / Minimum Char TACb SALE SIGNS M OTICEt 23— Herntt for Said 35—HMMt-PkiniMM 4t-loor«n( OooO* nooo the day I M P t f T M iH T 51 Mac, tor Itoto fA io :;^ d i 12:00 2 4 - Loie^ M lor Sdd 31 flooring ' ‘ ' 47—OdMn Prerhwlt A r e things piling up? Thlen why riot have a TA G SALE? The best way to an­ before publication. 1— LoM ans Found 13- Holp Wdntod •'•►-liweioneni Proptny IT— MeMnt-Tnidiino-aiDno* 45-MWoum 2— Portonolt 1 4 - ButiodM OpportunWM 28—imlntM Moptrty 3 t-t«M C M WaMM 4t-WMIto«Mew7 A U T O aO T tV E PER W ORD Deadline lor Saturday it 3— Announc«montt 1 5 - 8ltMUorf vy»nMd 27—Addorl Proporty nounce It. is with a Herald Tag Sate Classified Ad. When you place your ad, 4— Enioftammont 1 D A Y ...... 1 4a 12 noon Friday; Mon- S;»AuCttOftt MIEC. FON EALE P8WTALE 8 1 - Aulot fof BeI^ / you’ll receive TVVO TAG SALE SIGNS FREE, compliments of The Herald. EDUCATION MIEC. EpIWICEM 8 2 - TruehE tor SeIe 3DAY8 ...... ;i8 a day'a deadline la 2:30 40— HatNMwM QOOM 6Sr*wiw tor now 88-HEEvy IqulpmEnt tor 8eIe Friday. HHANCIAL 18— PrtvMi Intirucllont 4 1 - Ai« cIm tor S M 53-apenmeiw tor awn 84-MolorcvelEE*BlcyelEE e p A Y S ...... 12a i8-8ehooi8«ClEsm Sl-Mntcw OtwM 43-a«N4lllt tuMlM 64-ttomw tor awl 6 6 - CEmpErE«TrE>lEri MobilE Phone 643>2>^1 l~>Bondt«8tochE-MorlQAott 20— Intlrucuont WEntod n-PWWnt-raparlng 4 3 - Pal>eird*-bog« 5t Ottow ttorn toi a»n HOITIM 26 D A Y S ...... I l a 68—AulotocMivd >ErvtcE 0— Portonai Lotnt * U —BuMlneXonvaoWig 4 4 - MiMloal toMnmwnl* at itoiort Propwti tor a happy AOS ts.do PER INCH tO-*-(nturw>eo REAL ESTATE 34—RooUng-aidlng 4t-Bo«t • AeeMHrM 57—Wtontod to a*M 67— AulOE tor ftonl'tEEEE CALL 643-27t1 OR STOP IN AT OUR OFFICE 1 HERALD SQ., MANCHESTER \______• •••••••••••••• •••44W**** EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE EEEESEEEEEEEEEEfEEEEPESE •iiMhW Cwitmeling 22 Aitfpfsa for iato 41 Aptrtmtm For Htnt 99 Aperimente Per Hent BS Autot'Por Safe 61 Autos For 8 t l t 61 Motorcfclea-Blcfclet 04 Ne4> iraiitetf 1$ Bm Im u OpportmUht •••••••••••••••••««••••• ••••••••«••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••• EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE •EEEEEEEEEEEE«EEEEEEEEEE When in need of a Service or Product •••••••«•••••••••••••••• UUUUUUUIM************** JANITORIAL - Part MANCHESTER - (^In CARPENTRY WORK - SET OF MEN’S GOLF SOUTH WINDSra -CMy 4 ROOM APARTMENT TO 1976 MERCURY Ume/fuU time. CT driven Utmdry and Dry CleMiiii| Light W n ^ . “No Job CLUBS, bag, ca rt IM. Wat oiw bedtoom.^ UUUttes J^ SUBLET Available Sept. MONARCH - Excellent license and experience Store. aw . Good 16434996, and dry shop vac with, at­ duded. 9100. Locators 289-. 1st Call 6404283 or 647- 1813 CAPRI. Good running condition!, We!l serviced! mattrljfHtfr Mfratt necessary. Telepnone MS- lease. P.J. Spiledd, 6tt- DavU. tachments 4k d olly. X'- 8646 (sm. too)___ U ll. ______...... condition. Needs some 6 cylinders. Automatic. Air 1978 SUZUKI GS550 - 5056. 2131. Chndttfon. 930. 649-im . ------« body work. 9300. 6464450. conditioning. Am/fm Excellent condition. 91300. CALL A PROFESSIONAL C l ^ O B THAT COLD, UBASANT radio. 92250 or Best offer. Telephone 6465084. LOCAL LIGHT uataAilatad bnaanaht Into KITCHEN LIGHTING •••••••••••••••••••••••• 1971 T-BIRD - 54 000 Days 6462597; evenings "Your tdm m uH ity N ew spaper DELIVERY • Need 10 peo­ □ REAL ESTATE a warm, Iwautitul family FIXTURE, Navar uaad, toV A lE D 4 room s, VERNON - Heat included. original miles. Excellent 742-9575. SUZUKI - GS550L 1980 ple to start Immediately. •••••••••••••••••••••••• ^ 0 |)iii this Diici'toiy to woik fni you (.oil (vlt .’ / l l ) room, craated by Country harvasi gold. Bolds 3 lad floor. Middle aged per- Kiiu sised i three bedroom running, body, and in­ HOLDOVER - 600 miles. | Must have own transpbrta- Nomaa For Safa 29 CarpMtera uafog authentic Bulbs, 925. 64I-7917. sons preferred. Non- with Ibasement. Kid’s o.k. terior. Full power. 1968 DODGE WAGON - Moving must sell. Best tion. Small cars and motor­ barnwtfod. Financing smokers. No pets. Security (foil now. Locators 2366646 Negotiable. Serious only - Nice condition. Automatic offer. Call 569-6016 ; 523- cycles are ()K. Cash paid MANCHESTER - SVk available. Call-Roger FOR SALE: sears sewing and• rafarenees.------CaU 649- (am. fee) Matt 6463409. transmission, power 4606. daily, l^ ly in person from IFois ^nA^verUtB Your SerpieB OuBtuBiB tn Banrit, after 9:00 p.m., machine case: flteallK en- 5067. steering. Pretty and bedroom Colonial, m B(H,TON - (forpeted two •••••••••••••••••••••••• 104 Monday tnni PtUay bath, excellent conmaon. Dtrectory For At Ltute At $3.6$ For Week. Fleate 6494921., more flatbed nuchines. economical. Telephone 643- GIRLS 24 inch (folumbia 3 MANCHESTER - Two bedroom duplex with gar­ CADILLAC 1966, 4 door that’s Help Wanted U Help Wanted U above Nassiff Sporting (Hose to aU schools, 124k% 919. TelephoM 643^99: hard t, white, excellent 8932. speed bike. Good condition. PLEASE READ CkM^. M8 Main Street, M CaU 643-27H And Ath For Joe.______. Ho&Bhb 94 room heated apartment. age. 93do’s. Locators 236 9%. Boys 20 inch Huffy. •••••••••••••••••••••••• assumable mortgage, 5646 (sm. tee)______condiflon. Must be seen. floor. minimum down, many TWO BAMBOO SHADES Firat floor. No amliances. 48.000 original miles. 643- Good condition. $30. YOUR A D CARD GALLERY - ACCOUNTANTS ROOFER WILL INSTALL 9x7 white like new. Used ^ montbfo. Security, Telephone 6467366. Aggrmive full and part extras. CaU 277-7515 M IG M m M IM l MANCHESTER 9018. CtaasNM ads are taken NEED 20 PEOPLE to start p.m. m 648-1666 after 5 Roofing, Siding, or Gutters one season. 919.00 oach. n m 6 4 6 2 « , wededays, time sales people needed. ^larkling 3 bedroom home, Mr. Farmer: A Classified the awr I n pbaaa at a aan- COST immediately, advortising p.m. and wediends. for Low Discount Pricel Telephone 6494783. Q to5.______1974 VEGA - Good condi­ 1968 MUSTANG - Flexible hours, some for national and local Can Ken at 647-1866. new decor, extra bath, Automatic Transmission, Ad will bring eager buyers viBlsnos. The NaraM Is nights and Sundays. ^ ^ ly W ouUnH ••••••«••■»••••••••••••• 9250. Locators, 2365646 tion. 53,000 miles. 20 miles AGCOUNT/INT merchants. Full time and NORTH COVENTRY - OVER 190 B ottla for wine. GLASTONBURY - deluxe per gallon. 3 speed good condition, 9500. 646 for your us^ farm equip­ in person only. Card Retm Additlges,l>eeks, All Your A d fAnMna^MiimjNnif 26 919.00 for all. Sise 0 steel two bedroom, appliances, (sm fee) Gallery, Manchester part time students, NEW LISTING! PuU shed ^fpes of RamMeling and transmission. Needs work. ment. AMF Cuno, ■ housewives and all others. dormer on this lovely 0 toe 6” rubber shoes. basement, yam, kids o.k. •••••••••••••••••••••••• aalf le the slxa at tl|p Parkade, Manchester. toadar In ttw N^M rm irs. Free esthnates L ook Great BOLTON - roomy 9998.00 telephone 6462951. Apply in person from 104 room Cape in "Pilgrim SCHALLBR PLUMBINO- Umroyal - like new. 910.00. Just 9325. Locators, Mo(orcyc/et-8/CKC/es 64 power artiNtl Insartlae. bran E.O.E. nitration Indualry Fully insured. Probate Notice HEATlNO Water pump 9646 (sm fee.) bedroom, modem kitdi kitchen, •eeemmeemeemeeeemeeeeeee Monoay thru Friday above Hills." 1% baths, Builbins, FHONI 0484017 H ere? Telephone 643-1980. < MUST SELL 1975 BUICK NOTICE TO CHEDITORS haa an Immadlata Nassiff Sporting Goods. 069 specinlists.tciniists. Also, appUances, lame yard. EXPERIENCED TRUCK opanlng In our fireplaced livingroom, d a . Locators 2368646 (sm LA SABRE - AU power. 1973 HONDA 500 - ESTATE OF C LIFFO RD B. Coal AocounUng Mtlin Stieet, 2nd floor. huge bedrooms. Way beldw remodeliy; service or 15 p V Vinyl outside MANCHESTER - budget 2 91400 or Best offer. Please Excellent running condi­ QUITE Ibfdo DRIVER for ten wheelers. B m e m n a t repairs,' Free estimates. shutters, new. Never been bedroom, new decor, fee) The Hon. J. Stewart Stockwell, Experience on BacUoe Oapartmanl. In­ mailwt price at for telephone 6462161. tion with storage case and dividual muat LAUNDRY WASHMAN • quick aale. QOklo k D O N used. Various siaes. 95.00 carpets, modem kitchen. helmet. 9600 negotiable. Judge, of the Court of Probate, of and Dozen helpful. Con­ MANCHESTER - six room District of Hebron at a hearing poaaaaa a BS Applications now being REALTY'6434174. yott M ey Rmfi each. IWqihoDe 0404186. Unow 9300. Locators, 236 M A P U M o b il 1073 PlNTp - 4 cyl., 4 Call 633-5361 after 4:30 held on July 28. 1961 ordered that tact Upton Construction, Dagraa with a accepted for two perma­ •••••••••••••••••••••••• 5646 (sm fee) (fope with garage. Large ilawhrBtrr 742-6190. major In Accoun­ Vour Ad for Smmer S ereke, fur. « CWFWI iw iini yard, central location, speed, excellent mileage, p.m. all claims must be presented to the nent full time washmen. MANCHESTER • NEW A t Mmny •AS • et^uiiieATioN • D o0 t-0 M S *M i . 49 needs body work. 9600. fiduciary on or before September ting, 3-5 yaara Apply in person to: EAST HARTFORD .- 'Cosy availabla September 1. HOUSEKEEPER axparlonca USTINO! “ Shannon buitt” iHtertlMu At 9425 plus u tilities and Telephone mornings or 1975 TRIUMPH TRIDENT 25, 1961 or be barred as by law flpralb Meadows Convalescent Garriion Colonial on a 2 bedroom , aU modem weekends.6464849. 75, 11,000 miles, 91500 or provided. NEEDED FOR FULL prafarably In a Y o e W U h . appliances, kids o.k. 9900. aecurity. (foil after 6:00 a procaaa, ooat- Home, 333 Bidwell St., private large country lot 649-3092 best offer. 6462800 ask for Kathleen M. Sawyer. Oerk time work on an On-Call Locators, 216«646(sm tea) p.m. M671S0. ralatad anvlron- Manchester, 12% fixed rate mortgage SURPLUS JEEPS, CARS, Steve or Lee. The fiduciary is: basis. Ebccellent benefits. manl. Mual alaok WonaalfoldOoocts 40 FEMALE LAB.iSkTTER Myrtle Carol Guile Apply in person at the from owner if you hove a MANCHESTER - Comfor­ TRUCKS. Car Inventory poaaaaa a elaar SCHOOL BUS DRIVERS • large down payment IM lffT i [ R l CROSS.' 7 months, spayed VERNON • large 5 roomer, (2uick action is yours when 7 Rondalay Rd.. Meadows Convalescent undarttandingof a and all shots, livable, air, carpets, laundry room. table two bedroom house valned 92143 sold' for 9100. Amston, Conn. 06231 4 runs per day. fS.SSdall:^. GORDON REaL t Y 643- Similar bargains available. you want to sell something n N O T IC E S Home, 333 Bidwell Street, manufacturing Call Andovu’ School, An­ kTORS, excellent with children. Kfais o.k. $ m . Locators, on lame wooded lot. 9345. 080^ Herald Manchester. and Invantory con­ 2174. CALL! Locators 2365646 CaU for iiuormation, 602- with a Classified Ad. •••••••••••••••••••••••• dover, CT„ 74^7S». WASHERS; RANGES - FREE to good home. 2365646 (sm fee) trol ayatam. Clean, Guaranteed. Parts Telephonen e I 6 4 lM . (sm. fee) 041-8014, Ext. 7816. Phone Lost and Found 1 Garage bursting at the MANCHESTER - NEW caU refundable. CompatlUvo aalary DENTAL ASSISTANT • LISTING! Main Straet, 2 BU.TUII KY It Service. Low prices! MANCHESTER • Two seams? Sell no longer aa wan aa llbaral today to 8 B.D.Pehri4kSoa,6«»MUn MANCHESTE^- LEGAL NOTICE Part time afternoons, per­ bedroom, IMi Bath, deluxe LOST - July 22 and 23, two family xoned for busineai ful three bedroom duple1^; 1973 AMC MATADOR needed, but useful items banafita Including sonable, mature in- or office uae. Large com er Street. 1414171: condo, newly redecorated, TOWN OF ANDOVER Classi­ female light beige kittens Blua .Croaa, Blua * AUlMIIIUIISVIllYLtmilM Newly decorated.1. Kids & wagon, 4 door. Will with a low-cost Classified dividiul. Will train. S ^ lot with high riribillty. folly carpeted, 9429 plus Planning & Zoning Commission about 12 weeks old. Vicini- Ad^______Shlald, dantal and resume to Box (X) c/o The END TABLE, COFFEE FREE TO GOOD HOME • utilities. References and Pets O.K. 9325. Locators sacrafice. Good condition. ty Beaver Trail and Coven­ praacriptlon drug ■96,900: GORDON iilaR your (20 Cefore Tie R eese ftrnnj ^ 0 month adorable mixed 2365046 (sm. fee) 6464259 after 6 p.m. or 646 Action Taken plan, aa wall at Herald. S^ALTY 643-2174. TABLE, Floor type comer seenrity requested. Call try Lake. REWARD. MILLWRIGHT wanted for knick knack, lamp and mis- b re e d puppy. Shots, 6462301 after 6 p.m. 6014. ______At U » regularly icheduled meeting of July 27.1981. the Andover Plan­ dlacounla on ••••••••••••••••••MV*** He AWNINBt A CMIOniS ning ti Zoning Commiaaion took action on the following petitions. Telephone 742-8682. East Hartford paper mill— COOK - Experience cellaneons. ^ 646-7358 trained, good wiUi HOUSE FOR RENT Production schedule is con­ lalaura Uma aqulp- fnvMifrWffif n o p e n f e e children. Telephone 640- MANCHESTER - 6 room 1966 CADILLAC. Many Petition by Board of Selectmen of the Town of Andover lor the fied manL Apply Mon- required. Good working from 9:10 fo 9:98. TWO BEDROOM Portonolt tinuous 24 hr/7 day week— hniHcost * STORM WIMMWt S DOORS 5416. (fope, fuU basement, nice new parts, new drive shaft, widening of Hendee Road and raising the elevation to conform to the tOO day through conditions and bebefits. TENEMENT - (fombina- year flood study and replacing of Hendee Bridge. Need person skilled in MOST CENTRAL MAIN new brakes, new motor, Friday or band CUl 6494271 ta .m . 8 1p.m. aRARY tion g u stove. No utUitiea. yam, refrigerator, stove, Commission unanimously approved. welding electrical, raauma In con- STREET LOCATION • dishwasher, air- overhall, good rubber. Ask for b e ^ Long term Triple A lease : available at Boata-Aeoaeaerfoe 49 Near Main Street. Seeurite Petition of Fri Land Equities Inc. lor an excavation permit on a 74 mechanical rebuilding, and lldanca, lo: wholesale prices, (fostom •••••••••••••••••••••••• and references required. conditioner. 95Q0 plus Good transportation. $500. acre lot located north east of Route 6 and south of Route 87 on properly willing to perform misc. tefaant. ShoWs 5 figure ad. utilities. Telephone 646 Telephone M61265. belonging to Mr. William Monaco of Glastonbury. RIDE WANTED TO STATION ATTENDANT retnra. Call Mr. Lindsey and standard sisas 12 foot ALUMINUM 9130 monthly. (foUStMOTO./- Ad! maintenance duties. — BOAT, 4.9 motor; trailer 0645 or 633^4^ A conditional approval was granted and final approval will be granted PRATT & WHITNEY, 2nd needed part time. Apply In 643-1111. available. Visit oor factory when the following stipulations have been completed. Overtime available after and accessories. 9650. 1068 PLYMOUTH shift. From West Middle person. Oortn’s Sports Car showroom Monday - Satur­ 1. Operating hours shall be 7 a m. to 5 p.m. Monday to Friday with oc­ individual has proven Telephone 6466384 or 646 VALIANT - Automatic, 6 Turnpike. 643-4230. i £ c m o Center. Rt. 83 Vernon. Baaiimo Proportf 29 ♦••••••••••••••••••••••A day 66 P.m. Andta Fm^ casional Saturday operation from 7 a.m. to 12 noon. himself. — Work schedule witura Industries, 125 2062.______wA f , cylinUnder, Very good run- DIVISION StPrtett Olitrta 91 9sfvlcs8 Ottered 91 IMMEDIATE nliio condiUon, 646 2. Key shatl be added to plan. is 8 a.m. - 4 p.m. plus 47 Mabi Blraal, GROWING BUSINESS, ■ Edwin Jld., S c ^ Windsor. J. Names of adjoining property owners shall be added lo plan. necessary call-ins. — For PIZZA RESTAURANT, •••|t*«ku**«*******u5**** •••••••••••••••••••••••• OCCUPANCY • 24k Rooms, IMMACULATE - Phone □ EMPLOYMENT TaleollvISa, C T eSOSS Demads expansion of sales Can accommodate 40. Can 14 FT. STARCRAFT - 4. Title Fri Land Equities Inc. shall be added lo plan Interview call Bob Ger­ An tqual eppatIunNy BRK X. B L d ^ , STONE - C A M Ttnc'Service, Free Fiberriass, wifli trailer. 40 heat, . hot water, SPACIOUS 3 bedroom , 8. Performance Bond shall be posted at the amount deemed sufficient force. Anmitious people no longer take eare-of it. FpACES. Concrata. RESPONSIBLE MOTHER WHITB BATHROOM sink main 289-7496. Cellu imployar M/F needed to develop East of estimates. Discount senior will do babysitting and with fixtures 96.00. Two HP Bvinrude. ExceUent appUaniees. Main Street Uving room, dining room, 1070 DATSUN 210 Wagon, by the Board of M ecim en. C a l l M ^ . CmfoBey Rapnln. "N o Job location. Seenrity, b ig kitchen, partial Excellent condition, 5- 8. Fri Land Equities Inc. must obtain a permit from the SUte of Help Wanted 13 Products, 2 Forbes Street. River Trade in office SIDDWRDDDMD************ citixetts. Company ironing in nnr home. Call adJusteUe Jack supports condition! 9880. Phone 046 •••••••••••••••••••••••a Tbo SnuOl.’' ^ 6444356 Manchester owned and referencee. Telephone carpeting. 9425. Telephone speed, air conditioning, Cmnecticut. supplies. Full or part time anytime 64M108. 1100 each. Telephne 646 1781 A copy of the approvals and maps arc on file in the Office of the Town PART TIME - Earn extra CLERICAL POSITION EXECUTIVE fur Bitimatef. operated. CaU 646-1327. after 6 p .m ?:^ 4 ^ 1 . U no 6461438. body side molding, 94700. - unlimited potential on n BUSINESS Clerk. 643 FOR SALES answer, ke^ trying. ' moneyey while the kids are in SECRETARY needed for commission. Call 2324611 and SERVICES GRADUATE STUDENTS Oanfon Pnduelt 47 Dated this 3rd day of August. 1981, Andover, Connecticut. school.1. TelephoniTelephone Solicita­ DEPARTMENT busy Marketing Manager. after 6 p.m. EXTERIOR PAINITNO - for painting interiors and GIRLS BEDROOM Oflfoea-Sloraa for Rent PLANNING ll ZONING COMMISSION tion. E.2. Hartford company. Successful candidate must Must be able to work in­ decks, patios, driveway sxteriors at moderate f u r n i t u r e - dresser, STONE FREE LOAM. LARGE 6 ROOM MOB 1977 - 8 Track, John L. Kostic, Chairman DUFliEX - F ^ basement, Mary Keenan. Secretary A good telephone voice aiid have ability to type at the dependently. Will assist MAINTAINER I ^ Btnlett OBtnd 91 MAM PAH, Mancheater sealing, collage Junior nioes. 5 years experience. -shelves, com er deric and Pick m or delivend. CaU WORKSPACE OR luggage rack. Good condi­ diction a must. Hours 9 rate of 6Q wpm, some ac­ Manager with budgeting seddng work. Cne«> rates. 646-1564 or 6494U4. chair, double headboard 6 4 6 » n or 6444700 7:00 garage. 9375. Unbeated. 2 SIORAOE SPACE FOR tion. Best Offer. Telephone otun Male/Femsle. Permanent, 649-2871. Small repairs, months security. Mr. 2711 a.m. to 1 p.m. and 5 to 9 counting skills, some and salei forecasting. Estimates. 64344R a.m. to 10:00 p jn . R E ^ in Manchester. No Eric Adams, 5662999. piMitiqa, 35 hours weekly. REWEAVINO BURN remodeling, heating, also availabla. Antique Bfonddard, 64MM2. ' p.m. Call Mon. through shorthand, ability to attend Pleasant phone manner Prinflrily Custodian HOLES. Zippers, um­ baths, kitdians and water IttMlag CantnoUng .99^ white finish. Brand new lease qr lecurity dqiosit. Fri., 9 a.m. to 1 p.m., Mrs. to detail, and enjoy needed for frequent REFRIGERATION Reasonable rates. Suitable Duties, wito some minor brellas repalnd. Window beaters. FVea estimatesi condition. Please call 633- MANCHESTER - One Williams, 569-4993. working in a sales at­ customer and inside sales Plant Maintenance. Night shades, Venetian blinds. REPAIRS • Air- FARRAND 8904. * RENTALS for smaU business. RetaU mosphere. Contact: D.H. representative contact. conditioners, bedroom efficiency, and commerciaUy zoned. shift for the approximately Keys. TV FOR RENT, UOHT TRUCKING • Pen- REMODELING • Cabinets, appUances, all ntiUties, RN’S PART TIME, All Kennett at Cailyle Johnson Secretarial experience SO weeks a a a year that hbirlow’ s, 857 Main S tiw t refrigerators. New Roofing, Gutters, Room CaU 872-1801, 10 to 5. Make Co., 643-1531. EOE. cidg. Attics, Oellars, gar­ systems, “Carrier", cen­ Rooms for Root 92 fnrniabed, convenient, shifts at Student Health required. Shorthand a plus classes are held each fall, 0404221. Additions, D e ^ , All ^ p tt •••••••••••••••••••••••• Service. Physical assess­ but not necessary. For In­ ages clesned. All types tral or wall units. vate, aecuri^ required. NEWLY RENOVATED Winter and qiring. Day traih, bruih - refooved. o f Remodeling and MANCHESTER 0. 6165620 » « , 9160312 ment skills necessary. Call CUSTODIAL - Full time terview,7, pleaseplea! call Per- shift, summers and UCENSED DAY CARE POWERS Sales, Inc. 35 Rmalrs. Free esUmates. MICROWAVEOVEN-Ut- 310 square feet office poiisition available. Contact Picket, Split Rail, Oakland Street, ton M w In One with Brow­ Extremoly nice room. aftere 9:00. / avallanle. Main Street or write to Peg Maloney, sonnet Manager, Colonial between terms. Starting HOME - WiU watch ^ FuUy insured. Phone 643- Working gentleman Director of Nursing, Box Mrs. Janet Tnohe;>hey, R1Rham Fiber Division, l^dall,l^dall. chUd or Infant d a ^ . Call Stodude Fences installed. Mandiester. 6464251. ning grin. 9325. 6466620. location with ample Some salary 19,442 annnally; 6017. . High School. m iN n or Inc., 615 Parker Street, 9284670. preferred. Kitchen VERNON AvaUable e i^ ! parking. CaU 6462801. U-11, University o f Conn. good workliu conditions 6464062. privileges. 990 weekly. Storrs, Ct. 06268 at 468- ^9474. Manchester. 646-1233. and benefits. To apply; call A COMPLETE LEON CIEZSYNSKI Family aisad two bedroom. 4700. E.O.E. E.O.E. •••••••••••••••••••••••S' •••••••••• CARPENTRY service. Strano m a l Estate, 441- Reatpaid. Kids k Feta Mr. Carl MancarelU. Bu i l d e r . New homes, 1971______GIRL FRIDAY to work in Machester Community Memee l>dr M s IS Htmtt For $Ut 99 Counters, remodeling, additions, remodeliiu, roc O.K. ^ L o c a t o r s 2960646 small plastics manufac­ FEATURE WRITER - repairs, concrete work. No CAR PB t • 11x20 O r m (sm. fee) Extra TYPIST - PART TIME CoUege, 6464800, Ext. 201. roonu, garages, kitmena Shag with pad and two 3x5 CLEAN FURNISHED BASEMENT STORAGE afternoons. Transcription turing company. Must have This is a part time position Manchester Community Job too small. 649-1^. remodded, cellln p , hath experience preferred. Send working knowledge of ac­ with flenble hours. Appli­ < (nil in< i\ in fininad araa mgs. Bast ROOM for mature AREA with dirt floors. College is an Equal Oppor­ tile, dormers, roofing. tdtmm eeeeeee gentlemen. Main Street First room 18% ft.xU ft.; resume to JOBS, P.O. Box counting and have general cant must have bad some tunity Employer and rill ( ni \ I in . Residential or commar- :H, Vernon, Conn. 06066. secretarial skills. (Sill 646- previous writing Emthm. Can 6464701 after aeco^ room 23 ft.xl5% ft. Adheres to the principals d a l. 6484201. Arttofoa for Snfo 41 6pjn. ______MANCHESTER - On fin t 930 monthly. 64041717. Cash 2920 for appointment. ^ n 11 t 'I \ I 11 > s r h • I Iff I i f y . . experience. Please send of Affirmative action. lUALITY CERAMIC floor, two bedroom,-with DO SOMETHING ABOUT samples and short letter firing and greenware at DESIGN KITCHENS, ■tove ^ re fria a ra to r, WE DOING NOTHING. WOMEN TO WORK full or outlining, your background M a r k i n t h o n \ I sinivs (XNTRAL LOCATION • 5,000 Ft. WiU subdivide in CLERK POSITION discount prices. One third cabinets, vanities, couqter Free parking, kitchen PAY alAT, Private en­ Small Sections. 35 Oakland Become and Avon part time in small plastics to The Editor, Bos 0, AVAILABLE late Augurt ■ ■ '1:1; ' n , . I. tops, kitchen cabinet fironts factory. 2 shifts available. firing t&fffie. Telephone privllagee,' sei^ity and trance and y a r d , on Street, Manchester. Heavy representative, full time or Manchester Herald. Please in busy pharmacy. Varied custom woodworking, ALUMINUM Sheets used busline, watting dlitenoe 7-3:30 and 1:30-10. Call 646- do not call. written refarencas traffic area. Excellent part time. Earn good duties, Monday thru colonial' raprodnctions. pistes. .007 reqidred. For appointment to downtown. 9400 per puking. Low rental fee. i money and be your own 2920 for appointment. Fri^y only. 8 a.m.-l p.m. j.p . Lewis w e n t . _j'Vii",ufi 60SA cents month. CaU Den or Ed, 646 boss. Call 523-9401 or 646- BOOKKEEPER -12 month HOUSECLEANINO in­ 6«4999 after 4 p.m. or 1 p.m.-5 p.m. Apply m CAPE COD doors and out.. Reliable for 92; Phone 643- 2M7 after 5:00 64660n. • ••••••fWWWWWWWWW.WWfoWWttt _ Clean out your 36^-______PART TIME 8:30 to 2 p.m. position, Full charge s Secr6tary/Bookkeeper. person Westown Phar­ with refereoces. Call Herb e l e c t r ic a l I PRIVATE HOME R O M - R e s o rt Proptrif For \ experience necessary. macy, 455 Hartford Road, 6464767. • We do all types of 1 EXPERIENCED LEGAL Telephone 6434106. School bookkeeping S’JSffi"' Paneled, c a ip ^ wrik4n VERNON • Westwood R eel 50 attics & garages ... Manchester. trical Work! Conn. cedarised clowt prick Aputtnente, ana and two SECRETARY experience desirable, Con­ TEACHER/MOTHER will Ucenaa. (U I a fttf 9:00 [SALB-Ddiv^5 Manchester Law Office. PAINTERS tact Mr. Blamberg RAISED RANCH d e p ^ CO privileges, 646 b e d ro o m apartment! COTTAGE FOR RENT a tj COMPUTER OPERATOR babysit in my home. p.m.. 946-1510. 900 tax included. avallaSie. Rent Indndee Coventry Lake. ExceUentr V Full time. Call 643-2501. EXPEIHENCED IN in-, Regional School District IBM-34. ResponslbiliUes ,’gmvd.Can04l4l04. terior and exterior residen­ Bowers School district. wall to wall carpeting, wwAfHmi Twn bedrooms. ; > If you don’t need it SELL IT Number 8 Hebron, Tel. 226- include order processing, Reformchf. 64S44U. ROBERTS ^ DO YOU THINK YOU tial and commercial pain­ 9474 or 6494587. l a r g e ROOM IN NICE heat, hot Water, Now through Aagnsl 8th. \ invoicing and related •••••••••••••••••••••••• CONSTRUCTION CAMPlHd BQUIPM^ PRIVATE HOME 'Extra liancea, awlmmlng (foil evenings. 9#9I86. CAN Sell Bridesmaids or ting aifd finishing. reports. Also assist siith COMPANY • Oeqaral 10x14 (fomel Cuin<1M. Transportation a plus. Call CAPE COD PeMIntf^fepertng Si nei^borboodj^ Wedding Gowns? general office duties. Sosne earpenty and repairs, me 9 » . Opfonum 2 b « m jd s - par month. fM _ _ A fJ. SUMMER______HOME L ^ Wynshaw's at 60 Pratt St., 742-5067. FULL OR PART TIME experience desired. Salary rooms, family' rooms, oUnegtova. 9»- TdNihone _ ite bath, pis', IN Chariastown' RRhode Downtown Hartford has an Mail Processing Help. commenaprate with PROFESSIONAL . porches, and decks odr GRADE LEVEL .10 weekly. mew only. Robert C: vHitte iriaad. ( ^ C a r ^ 646 F R E E Classified Ads opportunity for you, full or Need dependable, willing experience. Company PAINTING ' Interior ind ipecialty. Dry wall and 00. IIM l^ e v o n ln g s and « n . part time, exceflent salary TEACHER aide positions. workers for busy plant. offers hospitallsalion, exterior. Coooimercial and aelling work dona. SWni.itoOLS dlrtrlbptor •eeeeeeeaaeeeeeeaaeeeeae and very pleasant working Bolton school syst^. 15-19 residential. Free es- weekendo 9761211 Will train. Good boiefits Major Medical, profit RAISED RANCH Chimney repairs and con­ ...----- of new 21’ foog ApwMenls For ItoM M CAPE COD, WEST conditions. Please call or hours per week.Please con­ and chances to advance. sharing, and free parking. ■ timates. FUly insured. 646- crete work. One day ssr- with huge aegi^eeaaaeeeeeveeeeeaee tact Richard Packman 643- 4879. OLASTONBUjRY D^NIS - 9 bedrooms, to all home subscribers of the drop in and see Martin Lib- Amily in person, weddays Please call Duo-Past vlce on small repairs, C4U MANCHESTER - J Spaikling two bedroom,'- clean, comforcomfortable, man, 527-5265. 2411. U60 Main Street, Hartfonl. N ortheast, 22 Tolland days bafora iiW A U em T LEE PAINTINO. Interior etc. bedrooms, 1% baths, ^ hnsemoal. Inundry, ^ AvaUable Sutemibu l 1st. ! Street, East Hartford, 189- Inc! nstallation. o.k .ta& . Locators II6994S >ras|iiioiie'Msphone 9469710. HeraM timt have something to sell... NURSES AIDE - Full or SE(3lETARV-Bookkeeper SANTA OAUS NEEDED 6861. A Exterior. "Check my rallabla. CaU mta before you decorate.'’ Final (sm. foe) . part time. Laurel Manor, - lull time. Experience 3 weeks in December. Suit m m i m . W m M to Rent 97 91 Chestnut S treet, necessary. Telephone 643- retired person. Jeff Jacobs . DgwAdM s. Fully Inaiired. MANCHESTER - Two Mandiester. 5056. 24M849. DELIVERY' PERSON for less than $99.00. NEEDED for Appliances, PORTA ______bwdvOoiii Pwfk Slid' OMat* RESPONSIBLE ADULTS 910 TVs Et Cetera. H ustbea i o y . % INTERIOR PAINTINO, '■ 9*^ RURUDOESTRSET'-lst nnt Condo. $400 pins seek 3% or 4 rooms muter nra wH nM yotw atf for • • ift frw of diarft. FW out llw coupon responsible individoal and over tap yaara axparianca, '• flo o r,''I b n o r ^ j i p ^ A A M s ^ refanred. tn o , prelerably south of bstow and oNhor nmu N or brluB n In porsonaNy to tto Mandwstor able to follow detailed in- FINANCING AVAlLABlfc low ratiw and •anlor dtiaen th p contor, . Will stiuctioBi. Excallent warn diseounta. 64I4999. . radocotitev 9WN99-. HtfSMI Sm OSn U M I OM SB- pm MmlPt Z nOMa pm H # On Nnw 3 Hfdrnori' '• . BRIN MASONRY g^PARiniBNT TO R R E N T efut baoMits.'F1aasa cau: BUILDERS, m o , ea ea tu t A1 Sieffart’s 6474697. Construction, on ' A." Int ", INTERIOR AND anA maagary oonshmilion • Mnachester *9| LUXURY HOMB„in Bolton. Complnti' •'•'II' ■ ■"•H«< 0 pnin EXTERIOR paittMng. knattvninsi Manchfster oi^ . Must CUP AN MNL TOMY bsumd. Call R tc h e lr l have mtulmum market 1 t 8 4 kld$ 91W ^ Weak Part Time ting cnrpi't s m a l l DINETTE vahM o f M99,000 end have At Home. Whbitar, «s: ftTLSa’S: TAm iT fp a_ r diaini W . iieto,(foll) spaciouB apd well- The Mencheetef Herald America B foremoit dle- b l b c t r ic a l 's b r y oisdfonrmoatlis. landaraped i r « ^ . (foU > • 7 1 - Wa do all ^ of 1 if96.Tita|itaaiie 1 Harold Sq. PARN EXTRA MONEY. WORK Uonary coinpany needB Ho Im R D B p O R MANCHESTER • family Nmtfevti3ngs. . Conn. 00640 / home ownara to update trical WmklLlc • is e d Five roomer. PAINTINO ^ A after 8:09 pja., ' ■ ' i f . . 19 It local maili^ iMsT AU DBCORATlNd Available now. Ucaters • 11 3 OR 4 HOURS A NIGHT. TOR S A L E '(fo m iin g ^ : 2169649 (sin, toe) s a ROOM DUPLEX - 1 agai,. axparianca un- 429-7117 Wallpnpsring and irafe, slsetrlc ★ RamovnL Eras 11 18 M ANCHESTUT-had in- towaU, all professional , WITH 18 U CALL IVAN AT 647-9946 9000. enaiiaioo 99H FoUy iaanrad. Call after driveways, to _ Two difldran, MATURE DOG, aeeks 4:W p,m ., 9474714. PJD. eloded. One b tA to tm . floors and an . . UttUttaa not ih- smallimall qngnlet apartment 88 DENTAL’ fANT . month. near l 94.'I. Oarage, ir 19 It AT THE MANCHESTER i’ARItV " ll I ■ > PAINTINO pONBr IBD LOAM - Fun Uma L !!ag,ja4{8iu!gi , dsrind. nBMOS 1IM $9ie Office. Foot KII'H''' SAS ' 1ST H A R T fO R p • ^isr' EVENING HERALD ExperlehcedDrofe bite one hoffinom. Lots m t a Bok tm , Vamon, after 4 p jn . ddiy. UmateB. ^ fflt ^ . Andover, 7A- H79. Loeatoca 2 2 ^ 2 2 2 i CT. .;2i3 /1 1 / (sm ie s)